
The Shock Doctrine The Rise of Disaster Capitalism
Reviews

I simply couldn't keep reading a book about total economic collapse caused by capitalism while also reading another book about incels, so I had to stop. First 250 pages were good tho

finally finished!!! super fascinating but wowie did it take me a long time to get through

Insightful, informative, and shocking.

Sometimes felt like the central metaphor was getting a little strained but overall really good and instructive

i am exhausted but this is an important book

Particularly poignant and relevant in light of the recent Greek crisis. "[...] the imposition of a cutthroat, combative economic model that made life harder for a majority of people at the very moment when what they needed most was reconciliation and an easing of tensions" (404).

Minha análise: http://virtual-illusion.blogspot.pt/2...

Brilliantly researched and hugely alarming. An essential read for anybody trying to understand the foundations of laissez-faire capitalism, the widening wealth division, or just how large multinational corporations benefit from, war, civil unrest, and natural disaster. As relevant today as it was thirteen years ago.

One of those books I feel absolutely compelled to review (despite the overwhelming sum below already). I'm no politics or economy nut, don't read much non-fiction at all, and tend to float around a little being fairly unaware of what is going on in the wider world, but I was glued to this book from start to finish. A friend recommended it to me, and it was clear when he described it that this was more than just your average recommendation. And since I began the book, I have in turn, raved and raved and raved about it to every single friend that gives me a second's window opportunity to 'go off on one', and I'm not usually one to gush and soliloquise. I cannot help but feel that this is a book that everyone should read, not so we are humbled or motivated into founding our own charities (though I admit, these are reactions the book may inspire) but primarily as a reminder, of the power and greed in the world that is so frequently presented to us as something else. As a culture, we are so used to having information thrown at us, that we take unquestionably for truth, especially if said information is deemed an trustworthy and truthful source, such as a university professor, a liable political figure or an independent paper. (Consider the horse meat scandal in the UK; before that, we devoutly trusted the official looking ingredients labels on food packaging.) This book reminds us of the fact that anyone can be bought off, or have their own incentivised agenda they are trying to push through, no matter what guise their information comes in. In the UK, we are perhaps not so aware of the raging corporate globalisation, as those in countries who have really been exploited. We are lucky in that, but for the small every day problems we have no real explanation for, such as, why are buses in my city so expensive and awful? Well, thanks to the privatised transport system and rule that companies cannot cooperate, First Great Western have done an excellent job of monopolising my area, rocketing their prices up so that only OAPs with free bus passes can get them, then First claim back all the money from the state, who provide the transport for the OAPs, leaving the rest of us to walk, drive or pay a stupid amount of money to a shitty company. I'm hardly claiming great suffering here, especially having just finished this book, but it is interesting to consider the world from such an angle as Klein writes about in The Shock Doctrine. I'd known this already (about the buses) but never before had I been able to understand the cause for the government de-privatising the transport system. Prescribe every economics student in the world with this book. This suggestion is perhaps hypocritical. By forcing everyone in the world to read this book I would become somewhat of a doctrine enforcer myself. However, I think, in light of the monopoly the small percentage of powerful people in the world have on our information sources, the suggestion is not such an inappropriate one. I don't believe it is a book intended to entirely change people's thoughts on markets and politics, but one that simply offers a different perspective, a perspective it is good to be aware of, especially if you're a student studying a related subject, and all you're hearing is Chicago boy ideology, before you go out into the real world ready to do some damage (or good), think about what this book is saying and don't become indoctrinated (by the Chicago boys OR this book). It's hard to really relay how brilliant this book is. I feel the more I write about it, the more I make it seem awful. But if you take anything from this review, take my word, that this book is incredibly well researched, well written, interesting, gripping, thought-provoking and definitely not a heavy technical non-fiction read meant only for politics nerds.














