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globalization |
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globalizationProcess by which different parts of the globe become interconnected by economic, social, cultural, and political means. Globalization has become increasingly rapid since the 1970s and 1980s as a result of developments in technology, communications, and trade liberalization. Critics of globalization fear the increasing power of unelected multinational corporations, financial markets, and non-government organizations (NGOs), whose decisions can have direct and rapid effects on ordinary citizens' lives. This has led to growing antiglobalization and anti-capitalist protests in the 1990s and early 21st century, which have disrupted international trade talks and meetings of international finance ministers. Supporters of globalization point to the economic benefits of growing international trade and specialization. NGOs criticized by opponents of globalization include the World Trade Organization (WTO), the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Critics are also concerned about the potential environmental consequences, the risk of eroding distinctive local cultures, and the possible exploitation of workers. Solutions suggested to defuse opposition to globalization include making bodies such as the WTO more politically accountable, and ensuring greater protection of workers' rights.
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| To enable this step, the globalists would turn their media assets loose to expose the crimes of a president or other high official to the American public. What I saw while watching the Woodward Dream Cruise was a response to the utter blandness of today's automotive landscape, and a repudiation of globalist, politically correct thinking, It's an analog to the meeting bikers have each year in Sturgis, South Dakota, except for the fact that the Dream Cruise looks more like a cotillion than an advertisement for leather, tattoos, and body piercing. An earlier version of this article appeared in The Globalist. |
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