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زندگینامه آناند گیرید هاراداس نویسنده "The True American" و "Calling India" است. او خبرنگار و خبرنگار خارجی نیویورک تایمز در سالهای 2005 تا 2016 بود و همچنین برای آتلانتیک، جمهوری نیوز و نیویورکر نوشته شده است. او یک مؤسس Aspen است، یک تحلیلگر سیاسی در هوا برای MSNBC و یک تحلیلگر مک کینزی پیشین. او روزنامه نگاری را در دانشگاه نیویورک تدریس می کند و در مرحله اصلی TED سخن می گوید. نوشتن او توسط انجمن ناشران در آسیا، فستیوال پویانتر در ییل و جایزه هلن برنشتاین، کتابخانه عمومی نیویورک، مورد احترام قرار گرفته است. او در بروکلین، نیویورک زندگی می کند. تحقیقات پیشگامانه خودی در مورد چگونگی تلاش های نخبگان جهانی برای "تغییر دنیای"، وضعیت موجود را حفظ می کنند و نقش آنها را در ایجاد مشکلاتی که بعدا به دنبال حل آن هستند، را از بین می برند. Anand Giridharadas، روزنامه نگار سابق نیویورک تایمز، ما را به سالن های درونی عصر طلایی جدید می برد، جایی که مبارزات ثروتمند و قدرتمند برای برابری و عدالت به هیچ وجه می تواند - به جز راه هایی که نظم اجتماعی و موقعیت خود را بر سر آن تهدید می کند. ما می بینیم که آنها خود را به عنوان منجی فقرا بازنویسی می کنند؛ چگونه آنها به شدت پاداش "رهبران تفکر" که تغییر "در" روش های دوستانه را باز تعریف می کنند؛ و اینکه چگونه آنها دائما تلاش می کنند که کارهای خوبتری انجام دهند، اما هرگز کمتر آسیب نرسانند. ما اعترافات لیموزین یک رئیس موسسه مشهور را می شنویم؛ شاهد یک رییس جمهور آمریكا درمورد خیرخواهان پلوتاكراتیك خود هستم. و شرکت در کنفرانس کشتی کروز که در آن کارآفرینان گرامیداشت خودشان را جشن می گیرند. گیریدراداس سؤالات سختی را مطرح می کند: چرا، به عنوان مثال، آیا باید به جای نهاد های دولتی مشکلات کثیف ما با شکاف بالای انتخاب نشده حل شود و از طریق لابی کردن و جلوگیری از مالیات ها دچار اختلال شود؟ او همچنین به یک پاسخ اشاره می کند: ما باید به جای تلاش برنده شدن از برنده ها، تلاش های دموکراتیک را برای ساختن نهادهای قوی تر و برابر و مساعدت به تغییر جهان انجام دهیم. تماس برای اقدام برای نخبگان و شهروندان روزمره به طور یکسان پرفروش نیویورک تایمز | نام یکی از The New York Times "100 کتاب قابل توجه 2018" است نام یکی از بهترین کتابهای سال 2018 NPRs است یکی از کتابهای سال مالی مالی تایمز نام دارد نام یکی از نوشته های واشنگتن "50 آثار غیرقابل شناخته شده" است یکی از کتابهای "Best International Nonfiction" شرکت کانال تلویزیونی سال 2018 | یکی از شرکت GreenBiz "سرگرم کننده و گیر دادن. . . برای کسانی که در سرنشینان هستند، ستیزه گران بشردوستانه و عوامل تغییر دهنده مهاجر که اعتقاد دارند که آنها کمک می کنند، اما در حقیقت همه چیز را بدتر می کنند، وقت آن است که به نقش خود در این معضل پیروزی برسند. من پیشنهاد می کنم که آنها ممکن است بخواهند یک نسخه از این کتاب را بخوانند در حالی که در تابستان امسال همپتون. »یوسف E. استیگلیتز، کتاب نیویورک تایمز "آناند گیریدرداداس در یک نخبگان جهانی در یک کتاب ترسناک، تحریک آمیز و به خوبی تحقیقاتی در مورد افرادی که به لحاظ ذهنی ایجاد تغییرات اجتماعی هستند، کشمکش می گیرد. . . آن را بخوانید و مراقب باشید. "- مارتا لین فاکس، مالی تایمز،" کتاب سال 2018 " "مشتاق . . گیریدراداس این ایده را مطرح می کند که بخشی از هوایی است که ما نفس می کشیم، صرفا ارزش این کتاب را دارد و طعم خوشمزه اش از بسیاری از کسانی که خود را خشنود می کنند و پول را از شیوه های کسب و کار مشکوک می سازد برای خواندن لذت بخش است. "-Bethany مک لین، واشنگتن پست "یکی از کتابهای درخشان و تحریک آمیز در مورد آنچه که در آمریکا اتفاق می افتد که سالها خوانده ام." -Senator Brian Schatz (هاوایی) "سال های گذشته، برخی از کتاب های برجسته ای راجع به نحوه چانه زدن مردم و دلار آنها سیاست عمومی را دیده اند. . . [آناند گیریدرداداس] در مورد آنچه که او به عنوان یک روحیه ظاهری در میان نخبگان ثروتمند می بیند، نازل شده است: در حالی که بسیاری از معانی (و رضایت بخش) آمریکایی ها ادعا می کنند که می خواهند نابرابری های اجتماعی را بهبود بخشد، آنها ساختارهایی را که این نابرابری را حفظ می کنند، میخواهند موقعیتهای ویژه خود را به خطر بیاندازند. "- جسیکا اسمیت، NPR،" بهترین کتابهای سال 2018 " "مهم . . . لحن همدلی، کتاب را به عنوان قدرت متقاعد کننده خود به دلخواه حتی از آن خوانندگان، مانند خودم، که اهداف انتقاد آن است، لمس می کند. »- مارک کرامر، بازنگری نوآوری اجتماعی استنفورد "یک کتاب فوق العاده مهم است." "مهم . . . [برندگان همه را] یک حمله ویرانگر به سرمایه داران خیرخواهی می کند. »-نژین سوسکی،" کرونیکل فانتوم " "ضروری است. . . یک نقد تکان دهنده. "کریس لمن، در این بار "تحریک آمیز و پرشور. . . این تصویر پر از معرفت انسان دوستانه معاصر آمریکایی، باید برای هر کسی که علاقه مند به "تغییر جهان است" باشد. "-Publisers Weekly (بررسی جعبه ای و ستاره دار) - مارک Tercek، مدیر عامل، حفاظت از طبیعت "Giridharadas یک مورد قانع کننده است. . . [او] در نهایت موفق می شود با برندگان همه را با اتخاذ یک رویکرد معتدل که فضای مکالمه را ایجاد می کند. " -Megan Tompkins-Stange، استادیار، دانشکده سیاست عمومی جرالد فورد، دانشگاه میشیگان "این بسیار سخت است

 

 

مشخصات و قیمت و خرید و دانلود کتاب برندگان همه چیز شخصیت نخبگان تغییردهنده جهان Winners Take All The Elite Charade of Changing the World Hardcover by Anand Giridharadas زبان اصلی pdf

 

Biography

Anand Giridharadas is the author of "The True American" and "India Calling." He was a foreign correspondent and columnist for The New York Times from 2005 to 2016, and has also written for The Atlantic, The New Republic, and The New Yorker. He is an Aspen Institute fellow, an on-air political analyst for MSNBC, and a former McKinsey analyst. He teaches journalism at New York University and has spoken on the main stage of TED. His writing has been honored by the Society of Publishers in Asia, the Poynter Fellowship at Yale, and the New York Public Library’s Helen Bernstein Award. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

 

An insiders groundbreaking investigation of how the global elites efforts to "change the world" preserve the status quo and obscure their role in causing the problems they later seek to solve.

Former New York Times columnist Anand Giridharadas takes us into the inner sanctums of a new gilded age, where the rich and powerful fight for equality and justice any way they can--except ways that threaten the social order and their position atop it. We see how they rebrand themselves as saviors of the poor; how they lavishly reward "thought leaders" who redefine "change" in winner-friendly ways; and how they constantly seek to do more good, but never less harm. We hear the limousine confessions of a celebrated foundation boss; witness an American president hem and haw about his plutocratic benefactors; and attend a cruise-ship conference where entrepreneurs celebrate their own self-interested magnanimity.

Giridharadas asks hard questions: Why, for example, should our gravest problems be solved by the unelected upper crust instead of the public institutions it erodes by lobbying and dodging taxes? He also points toward an answer: Rather than rely on scraps from the winners, we must take on the grueling democratic work of building more robust, egalitarian institutions and truly changing the world. A call to action for elites and everyday citizens alike

 مشخصات و قیمت و خرید و دانلود کتاب برندگان همه چیز شخصیت نخبگان تغییردهنده جهان Winners Take All The Elite Charade of Changing the World Hardcover by Anand Giridharadas زبان اصلی pdf


A New York Times bestseller | Named one of The New York Times "100 Notable Books of 2018" | Named one of NPRs "Best Books of 2018" | Named one of the Financial Times "Books of the Year" | Named one of The Washington Posts "50 Notable Works of Nonfiction" | One of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Best International Nonfiction” books of 2018 | One of the GreenBiz


“Entertaining and gripping . . . For those at the helm, the philanthropic plutocrats and aspiring change agents who believe they are helping but are actually making things worse, it’s time for a reckoning with their role in this spiraling dilemma. I suggest they might want to read a copy of this book while in the Hamptons this summer.” —Joseph E. Stiglitz, The New York Times Book Review

“Anand Giridharadas takes a swipe at the global elite in a trenchant, provocative and well-researched book about the people who are notionally generating social change . . . Read it and beware.” —Martha Lane Fox, Financial Times, “Books of the Year 2018”

“Impassioned . . . That Giridharadas questions an idea that has become part of the air we breathe is alone worth the price of the book, and his delicious skewering of the many who exalt their own goodness while making money from dubious business practices makes for entertaining reading.” —Bethany McLean, The Washington Post

“One of the most insightful and provocative books about what’s going on in America that I’ve read in years.” —Senator Brian Schatz (Hawaii)

“The past years have seen some outstanding books on how philanthropists and their dollars have shaped public policy . . . [Anand Giridharadas] zeros in on what he sees as a glaring hypocrisy among affluent elites: that while many well-meaning (and well-off) Americans claim to want to improve societys inequalities, they dont challenge the structures that preserve that inequality, not wanting to jeopardize their own privileged positions.” —Jessica Smith, NPR, “Best Books of 2018”

“Important . . . [An] empathic tone gives the book its persuasive power to touch the hearts of even those readers, like myself, who are the targets of its criticism.” —Mark Kramer, Stanford Social Innovation Review

“An extraordinarily important book.”

“Important . . . [Winners Take All] levels a devastating attack on philanthrocapitalism.” —Benjamin Soskis, The Chronicle of Philanthropy

“Indispensable . . . A lacerating critique.” —Chris Lehmann, In These Times

“Provocative and passionate . . . This damning portrait of contemporary American philanthropy is a must-read for anyone interested in ‘changing the world.’”Publishers Weekly (boxed and starred review)

—Mark Tercek, CEO, The Nature Conservancy

“Giridharadas makes a compelling case . . . [He] ultimately succeeds with Winners Take All by adopting a temperate approach that creates space for a conversation.”


مشخصات و قیمت و خرید و دانلود کتاب برندگان همه چیز شخصیت نخبگان تغییردهنده جهان Winners Take All The Elite Charade of Changing the World Hardcover by Anand Giridharadas زبان اصلی pdf


—Megan Tompkins-Stange, assistant professor, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan

“This is a very difficult subject to tackle, but Giridharadas executes it brilliantly . . . This must-have title will be of great interest to readers, from students to professionals and everyone in-between, interested in solutions to today’s complex problems . . . Winners Take All will be the starting point of conversations private and in groups on alternatives to the status quo and calls to action. An excellent book for troubled times.” Booklist

“In Anand’s thought-provoking book his fresh perspective on solving complex societal problems is admirable. I appreciate his commitment and dedication to spreading social justice.” —Bill Gates

“An insightful and refreshing perspective on some of the most vexing issues this nation confronts. This is an important book from a gifted writer whose honest exploration of complex problems provides urgently needed clarity in an increasingly confusing era.” —Bryan Stevenson, author of Just Mercy

“A trenchant, humane, and often revelatory investigation by one of the wisest nonfiction writers going.” —Katherine Boo, author of Behind the Beautiful Forevers

Winners Take All is the book I have been waiting for—the most important intervention yet regarding elite-driven solutions, a vitally important problem to expose. The book courageously answers so many of the critical questions about how, despite much good will and many good people, we struggle to achieve progress in twenty-first-century America. If you want to be part of the solution, you should read this book.” —Ai-jen Poo, director, National Domestic Workers Alliance

“A brilliant, rising voice of our era takes us on a journey among the global elite in his search for understanding of our tragic disconnect. Thought-provoking, expansive, and timely.” —Isabel Wilkerson, author, The Warmth of Other Suns

Winners Take All boldly exposes one of the great if little-reported scandals of the age of globalization: the domestication of the life of the mind by political and financial power and the substitution of ‘thought leaders’ for critical thinkers. It not only reorients us as we lurch out of a long ideological intoxication; it also embodies the values—intellectual autonomy and dissent—that we need to build a just society.” —Pankaj Mishra, author of Age of Anger

“In this trenchant and timely book, Anand Giridharadas shows how the winners of global capitalism seek to help the losers, but without disturbing the market-friendly arrangements that keep the winners on top. He gives us an incisive critique of corporate-sponsored charities that promote frictionless ‘win-win’ solutions to the world’s problems but disdain the hard, contentious work of democratic politics. An indispensable guide for those perplexed by the rising public anger toward ‘change-making’ elites.” —Michael J. Sandel, author of What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets

About the Author

ANAND GIRIDHARADAS is the author of The True American and India Calling. He was a foreign correspondent and columnist for The New York Times from 2005 to 2016, and has also written for The Atlantic, The New Republic, and The New Yorker. He is an Aspen Institute fellow, an on-air political analyst for MSNBC, and a former McKinsey analyst. He teaches journalism at New York University and has spoken on the main stage of TED. His writing has been honored by the Society of Publishers in Asia, the Poynter Fellowship at Yale, and the New York Public Librarys Helen Bernstein Award. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Excerpted from WINNERS TAKE ALL:

A successful society is a progress machine. It takes in the raw material of innovations and produces broad human advancement. America’s machine is broken. When the fruits of change have fallen on the United States in recent decades, the very fortunate have basketed almost all of them. For instance, the average pretax income of the top tenth of Americans has doubled since 1980, that of the top 1 percent has more than tripled, and that of the top 0.001 percent has risen more than sevenfold—even as the average pretax income of the bottom half of Americans has stayed almost precisely the same. These familiar figures amount to three and a half decades’ worth of wondrous, head-spinning change with zero impact on the average pay of 117 million Americans.

Thus many millions of Americans, on the left and right, feel one thing in common: that the game is rigged against people like them. It is no wonder that the American voting public— like other publics around the world—has turned more resentful and suspicious in recent years, embracing populist movements on the left and right, bringing socialism and nationalism into the center of political life in a way that once seemed unthinkable, and succumbing to all manner of conspiracy theory and fake news. There is a spreading recognition, on both sides of the ideological divide, that the system is broken and has to change.

Some elites faced with this kind of gathering anger have hidden behind walls and gates and on landed estates, emerging only to try to seize even greater political power to protect themselves against the mob. But in recent years a great many fortunate people have also tried something else, something both laudable and self-serving: They have tried to help by taking ownership of the problem.

All around us, the winners in our highly inequitable status quo declare themselves partisans of change. They know the problem, and they want to be part of the solution. Actually, they want to lead the search for solutions. They believe that their solutions deserve to be at the forefront of social change. They may join or support movements initiated by ordinary people looking to fix aspects of their society. More often, though, these elites start initiatives of their own, taking on social change as though it were just another stock in their portfolio or corporation to restructure. Because they are in charge of these attempts at social change, the attempts naturally reflect their biases.

The initiatives mostly aren’t democratic, nor do they reflect collective problem-solving or universal solutions. Rather, they favor the use of the private sector and its charitable spoils, the market way of looking at things, and the bypassing of government. They reflect a highly influential view that the winners of an unjust status quo— and the tools and mentalities and values that helped them win—are the secret to redressing the injustices. Those at greatest risk of being resented in an age of inequality are thereby recast as our saviors from an age of inequality.

Socially minded financiers at Goldman Sachs seek to change the world through “win-win” initiatives like “green bonds” and “impact investing.” Tech companies like Uber and Airbnb cast themselves as empowering the poor by allowing them to chauffeur people around or rent out spare rooms. Management consultants and Wall Street brains seek to convince the social sector that they should guide its pursuit of greater equality by assuming board seats and leadership positions. Conferences and idea festivals sponsored by plutocrats and big business host panels on injustice and promote “thought leaders” who are willing to confine their thinking to improving lives within the faulty system rather than tackling the faults. Profitable companies built in questionable ways and employing reckless means engage in corporate social responsibility, and some rich people make a splash by “giving back”—regardless of the fact that they may have caused serious societal problems as they built their fortunes. Elite networking forums like the Aspen Institute and the Clinton Global Initiative groom the rich to be self-appointed leaders of social change, taking on the problems people like them have been instrumental in creating or sustaining. A new breed of community-minded so-called B Corporations has been born, reflecting a faith that more enlightened corporate self-interest—rather than, say, public regulation—is the surest guarantor of the public welfare. A pair of Silicon Valley billionaires fund an initiative to rethink the Democratic Party, and one of them can claim, without a hint of irony, that their goals are to amplify the voices of the powerless and reduce the political influence of rich people like them.

The elites behind efforts like these often speak in a language of “changing the world” and “making the world a better place” more typically associated with barricades than ski resorts. Yet we are left with the inescapable fact that in the very era in which these elites have done so much to help, they have continued to hoard the overwhelming share of progress, the average American’s life has scarcely improved, and virtually all of the nation’s institutions, with the exception of the military, have lost the public’s trust.

Are we ready to hand over our future to the elite, one supposedly world-changing initiative at a time? Are we ready to call participatory democracy a failure, and to declare these other, private forms of change-making the new way forward? Is the decrepit state of American self-government an excuse to work around it and let it further atrophy? Or is meaningful democracy, in which we all potentially have a voice, worth fighting for?

There is no denying that today’s elite may be among the more socially concerned elites in history. But it is also, by the cold logic of numbers, among the more predatory in history. By refusing to risk its way of life, by rejecting the idea that the powerful might have to sacrifice for the common good, it clings to a set of social arrangements that allow it to monopolize progress and then give symbolic scraps to the forsaken—many of whom wouldn’t need the scraps if the society were working right. This book is an attempt to understand the connection between these elites’ social concern and predation, between the extraordinary helping and the extraordinary hoarding, between the milking—and perhaps abetting—of an unjust status quo and the attempts by the milkers to repair a small part of it.

There are many ways to make sense of all this elite concern and predation. One is that the elites are doing the best they can. The world is what it is; the system is what it is; the forces of the age are bigger than anyone can resist; the most fortunate are helping. This view may allow that this helpfulness is just a drop in the bucket, but it is something. The slightly more critical view is that this elite-led change is well-meaning but inadequate. It treats symptoms, not root causes; it does not change the fundamentals of what ails us. According to this view, elites are shirking the duty of more meaningful reform.

But there is still another, darker way of judging what goes on when elites put themselves in the vanguard of social change: that it not only fails to make things better, but also serves to keep things as they are. After all, it takes the edge off of some of the public’s anger at being excluded from progress. It improves the image of the winners. With its private and voluntary half-measures, it crowds out public solutions that would solve problems for everyone. For when elites assume leadership of social change, they are able to reshape what social change is—above all, to present it as something that should never threaten winners. In an age defined by a chasm between those who have power and those who don’t, elites have spread the idea that people must be helped, but only in market-friendly ways that do not upset fundamental power equations. The society should be changed in ways that do not change the underlying economic system that has allowed the winners to win and fostered many of the problems they seek to solve.

What is at stake is whether the reform of our common life is led by governments elected by and accountable to the people, or rather by wealthy elites claiming to know our best interests. We must decide whether, in the name of ascendant values such as efficiency and scale, we are willing to allow democratic purpose to be usurped by private actors who often genuinely aspire to improve things but, first things first, seek to protect themselves. Yes, government is dysfunctional at present. But that is all the more reason to treat its repair as our foremost national priority. Pursuing workarounds of our troubled democracy makes democracy even more troubled. We must ask ourselves why we have so easily lost faith in the engines of progress that got us where we are today—in the democratic efforts to outlaw slavery, end child labor, limit the workday, keep drugs safe, protect collective bargaining, create public schools, battle the Great Depression, electrify rural America, weave a nation together by road, pursue a Great Society free of poverty, extend civil and political rights to women and African Americans and other minorities, and give our fellow citizens health, security, and dignity in old age.

This book offers a series of portraits of this elite-led, market- friendly, winner-safe social change. In these pages, you will meet people who ardently believe in this form of change and people who are beginning to question it.

What these various figures have in common is that they are grappling with certain powerful myths—the myths that have fostered an age of extraordinary power concentration; that have allowed the elite’s private, partial, and self-preservational deeds to pass for real change; that have let many decent winners convince themselves, and much of the world, that their plan to “do well by doing good” is an adequate answer to an age of exclusion; that put a gloss of selflessness on the protection of one’s privileges; and that cast more meaningful change as wide-eyed, radical, and vague.

It is my hope in writing what follows to reveal these myths to be exactly that. Much of what appears to be reform in our time is in fact the defense of stasis. When we see through the myths that foster this misperception, the path to genuine change will come into view.

 
 مشخصات و قیمت و خرید و دانلود کتاب برندگان همه چیز شخصیت نخبگان تغییردهنده جهان Winners Take All The Elite Charade of Changing the World Hardcover by Anand Giridharadas زبان اصلی pdf
 
 
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September 10, 2018
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
As someone who has spent many years seeking/securing grants from foundations, and almost 12 years working as a senior program officer at a large community and large private foundation, I believe my "headline," while humorous, sums up my understanding of philanthropy and one of the major themes of Winners Take All. I share another concern well described by Anand, namely, the extremely serious abdication of public responsibility for basic human needs. In large part, this is because the very rich, the gatekeepers they employ, and their political allies have intentionally worked to limit the viability of our public sector since the Reagan presidency. In fact, as Anand also notes, this has been done in various ways since the early part of the 20th century when the first large foundations were created by Rockefeller and Carnegie. I believe Anand would agree with my view that the rich use philanthropy and the entire nonprofit sector as a diversion from a strong public sector which, in these times, would be at least some form of American social democracy. If I could afford it, I would buy copies of Winners Take All for anyone who wants to understand the role of charity and philanthropy in maintaining existing power relations by limiting the power and effectiveness of a viable, democratic public sector. We must address the dominance of unaccountable, self-serving elites with democratic, public alternatives as Anand so brilliantly, courageously, and elegantly elucidates in Winners Take All.
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Mal Warwick
September 19, 2018
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I picked up this book thinking it was about me and my friends. Its not, though. Despite the subtitle, Winners Take All is not about the entrepreneurs and investors who are involved in socially responsible businesses whose mission is to change the world. The sole exception is the authors brief excursion in the epilogue into the B Corporation movement, in which Ive been involved since the beginning. And he appears not to understand what B Corps are about.

"Elite-led, market-friendly, winner-safe social change"

In Winners Take All, author Anand Giridharadas zeroes in on growing economic inequality in America. As he notes at the outset, "When the fruits of change have fallen on the United States in recent decades, the very fortunate have basketed almost all of them." His culprit? "Elite-led, market-friendly, winner-safe social change." This is the set of beliefs held by the people who attend the World Economic Forum at Davos and gather at such other places as Aspen and the Clinton Global Initiative. In reviewing this book for the New York Times, Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Stieglitz described them as "an elite that, rather than pushing for systemic change, only reinforces our lopsided economic reality—all while hobnobbing on the conference circuit and trafficking in platitudes." Giridharadas calls their mindset MarketWorld.

"An ascendant power elite" that seeks to do good by doing well
"MarketWorld," he explains, "is an ascendant power elite that is defined by the concurrent drives to do well and do good, to change the world while also profiting from the status quo. It consists of enlightened businesspeople and their collaborators in the worlds of charity, academia, media government, and think tanks."

Giridharadas takes on the elite consulting firms as well, citing McKinsey and its peers in the industry as among the culprits. The values they all promote are those of the marketplace; its proponents always talk about opportunities to solve problems, never about those who are responsible for creating the problems in the first place. The author distinguishes between public intellectuals (good) and thought leaders (bad). In his view, the former are primarily academics free of commercial influences. The latter have fallen for MarketWorld values, hook, line, and sinker. And that strikes me as simplistic. It would be naive to imply that major corporations havent made inroads into academia.

The eight billionaires who own half the worlds wealth are an easy target

Author Anand Giridharadas aims his most powerful broadsides at easy targets such as the multimillionaire and billionaire leaders of the tech and financial industries. Can anyone seriously argue that Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Goldman Sachs are addressing the economic inequality that Giridharadas identifies as the central issue? No matter what their leaders say, theyre clearly part of the problem, not the solution.

As I write today, Jeff Bezos of Amazon can claim a net worth of $162.9 billion. Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg is "worth" $60.4 billion. The Google guys, Larry Page and Sergei Brin, weigh in at $54.1 billion and $52.7 billion, respectively. These four men are among the eight billionaires whose collective net worth is equal to all the wealth of half of the worlds population. Yes, just eight billionaires. And Goldman Sachs possesses assets of nearly $1 trillion. How could anyone suggest that these people would even consider lobbying the federal government to adopt policies that would lessen economic inequality in America? Yet Giridharadas complains that they dont.

Winners Take All is based on the premise that these would-be do-gooders call the shots in the American economy and dominate the political debate. The author implies that economic inequality would quickly shrink if these folks were to work for genuine social change. However, this is far from the truth. Most wealthy people in the United States are conservative Republicans who do not pretend to be change agents. And they exert far greater power and influence in American society than the Davos and Aspen set. In todays political discourse, the Heritage Foundation and its peers among Right-Wing think tanks and the institutions of the Christian Right wield far more power in setting government policy at both the federal and state levels than the "enlightened elite" Giridharadas writes about.

Bill Clintons central role in making the problem immeasurably worse

In the authors view, its not just clueless businessmen or Republicans who are at fault. Bill Clinton also comes in for justifiable criticism. His "Third Way" between left and right effectively reversed the Democratic Partys commitment to helping the less fortunate in our society. Remember mass incarceration? Financial deregulation? So-called welfare "reform?" Bill Clinton institutionalized the neoliberal consensus that Ronald Reagan had brought to the White House a decade previously—and the consequences were devastating, years before Donald Trump entered the political scene. On this point, Giridharadas is right on the money. (Pun intended.)

Just for example, deregulation, including the repeal of Glass-Steagall, was among the root causes of the Great Recession that struck in 2008. Dont forget that millions lost their homes, and millions more lost their jobs, in that calamitous economic downturn. Democrat or Republican—it doesnt seem to matter. Not a single US President over the past half century has taken any significant step to address America’s growing inequality in wealth and income. Barack Obama was by far the best of them, but he also:

** named as his top economic advisers many of the same people whose policies in the 90s brought down the economy in the 2000s;
** prevented the prosecution of the bankers who caused the crash; and
**failed to question the prevailing bipartisan love affair with Corporate America.

Who will lead society toward viable solutions?

Heres the crux of the matter, as Giridharadas sees it: "What is at stake is whether the reform of our common life is led by governments elected by and accountable to the people, or rather by wealthy elites claiming to know our best interests." It doesnt matter how well-intentioned they might make themselves out to be. If they dont actively work to raise estate and income taxes, drive private money out of politics, provide universal free healthcare, and work to elect people committed to serving the majority of Americas people, theyre part of the problem. Nothing else they do can be a solution. And to that I say amen.

What other reviewers say about the book

** In his review of the book, Joseph Stieglitz notes that "Giridharadas is careful not to offend. He writes on two levels—seemingly tactful and subtle—but ultimately he presents a devastating portrait of a whole class, one easier to satirize than to reform."
** Kirkus Reviews leads its commentary with this: "Give a hungry man a fish, and you get to pat yourself on the back—and take a tax deduction." The review concludes that Winners Take All is "A provocative critique of the kind of modern, feel-good giving that addresses symptoms and not causes."
** Writing in Forbes, B Lab co-founder and managing partner Jay Coen Gilbert terms Winners Take All a "new and important book." Before launching into a defense of Certified B Corporations, Gilbert notes that "In provocative style and with compelling substance, Giridharadas speaks truth to power, calling elites to account for giving so much lip service to changing the world, while mostly upholding an unacceptable status quo."
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T. Rucker
September 16, 2018
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Winners Take All is a self-help book for the uber wealthy. I say this somewhat in jest, but, as Anand Giridharadas writes in his acknowledgements, his purpose for writing this book was as an “inquiry into the apparatus of justification” that permits the wealthy to win at all costs, including extractive business practices that result in growing inequality and environmental damage, only to position themselves as having the answers to the problems that they have contributed to creating and accelerating. While his focus is on the uber wealthy, Giridharadas tenaciously exposes a universal human deficit: We all struggle to recognize our two selves—the person we aspire to be and the person we are. What continuously came up for me as I read Winners Take All is the need people have to be seen as good, but not being able to make the personal sacrifices (i.e. not winning) that real goodness demands.

This is, by far, one of the most important books published in the 21st century. Giridharadas articulates, with great storytelling, the illusion that has gripped us—particularly Americans,—allowing, if not engineering, injustice and inequality into our way of life: There are several ways to define it, including market mindset or really materialism where money elevates the monied by virtue of their market acumen to rule. He calls them MarketWorlders—people who apply a market perspective to solving social issues. Winners Take All offers all of us who have ever dreamt of changing the world to interrogate our motives, to think about who we are inviting to the table, and to understand that who we are, the experiences we’ve had, and the questions we ask or don’t ask determine the who, what, when, where and how of change. And if the only change we can imagine insists on us not losing comfort, reputation, influence, power, and so on, then we’ve already limited the change that is possible.
 
 
 
 
مشخصات و قیمت و خرید و دانلود کتاب برندگان همه چیز شخصیت نخبگان تغییردهنده جهان Winners Take All The Elite Charade of Changing the World Hardcover by Anand Giridharadas زبان اصلی pdf
 


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