What Todays Innovations Can Learn from the Railways
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Video Source: www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dauLBsOONU
It was as a result of this discussion, of this book, Three New Deals, that my program came to be called Foundationalism. And here, learning from movements of the past, I offer thoughts about how Foundationalism can be brought to pass (although I would be less negative about small-scale farming now; this article was first published November 26, 2018.) • The written, original version of this article can be found here: https://theworthyhouse.com/2018/11/26... • We strongly encourage, in these days of censorship and deplatforming, all readers to bookmark our main site: • https://www.theworthyhouse.com • and to subscribe for email notifications of new posts. The Worthy House does not solicit donations or other support, or have ads. You can subscribe for email notifications here: • https://theworthyhouse.com/subscribe-... • Video podcasts identical to YT are also available at Odysee: • https://odysee.com/@TheWorthyHouse • This and all Worthy House narrations are offered with accurate closed captions (not auto-generated). • This book, a brief work of cultural history, outlines four parallel aspects of three political systems: the American New Deal, Italian Fascism, and German National Socialism. The point of Three New Deals is that these political systems shared core similarities in certain programmatic manifestations. The author, Wolfgang Schivelbusch, fortunately does not claim that the three systems were essentially the same. He offers, instead, a discussion of the interplay between the governed and the governors in each of these systems—how each shaped the other, in ways that can be compared and contrasted across systems. The result is a book of modest interest from which, perhaps, something more can be spun. . . .
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