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Reviews for The Gods That Failed: How Blind Faith in Markets Has Cost Us Our Future

 The Gods That Failed magazine reviews

The average rating for The Gods That Failed: How Blind Faith in Markets Has Cost Us Our Future based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-03-31 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 3 stars Angel Robles
A badly mistimed book written too soon, before the major financial crises in 2008 had occurred. These are briefly summarised in the second afterword. It is interesting in its way because it's a far wider exploration of the causes of the financial crisis than other books. It covers developments in society / politics as well as finance which makes it a more comprehensive version of events. The authors conclude by listing actions that should be taken to rectify the fundamental problems, of course none of them have been implemented. Should we be sad or angry that the gods, the financial / political class, have just acted to maintain their own interests? Let's get angry.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-01-10 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 5 stars Romeo Alvidera
What did I learn? It's consume or die. Ruh-roh. Update - from my review on blogger.com: After the admission that I knew the author personally, I moved on to The Tome. I'm not through with the footnotes yet, but I did slog through the text. And I mean "slog" in the nicest way. This is the meaty prose of the dissertation, lightened hither and yon by Charlie's inimitable wryness. Example: subheading in chapter 7: "Slaughter on Madison Avenue" - great balls o' fire, he even worked in a musical reference! Further on, he remarks that "in the early 1930s the Buy-ological Urge [as expressed by Better Homes and Gardens:] seemed less frequent than cicadas." This topic is actually one of my pet bugbears. I am a fan of Consumer Reports, which I refer to before all major purchases (using the library copy - tee hee!) I was crushed when the kids' version, Zillions, went on-line where I couldn't read it. There was a time that I wandered around ranting that our economy was based solely on the exchange of cash for crap, yards of crap, endless steaming juggernauts of crap. And what was worse, there seemed to be no way away from it. I truly hoped that this book would tell me where this happened (which might lead to a way away from it). The book does not do this. Anyway, it's never one defining moment. This is a process beginning in the 1890s and on-going to our day and beyond. By "beyond," I mean more than in time, but also geographically. Consumerism seems to be the Ice Nine that will doom our civilization. If Charlie's book does anything, it confirms my fears (not really immediate fears, but deep ones) about business and advertising.


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