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Capitalism as Catastrophe

The Shock Doctrine:
The Rise of Disaster Capitalism

by Naomi Klein
Metropolitan Books, 2007, 576 pp $28



A strange contradiction afflicts nonhierarchical social movements. Those activists who are most hesitant to create formal mechanisms for naming leaders give the media the most power to choose their leaders for them. Certainly this has been the case in the globalization movement, where an anarchist ethos has prevailed. Faced with a vast network of affinity groups, spokescouncils, and local organizations, the news media have been desperate to find a few recognizable figures to present as figureheads. They have thrust a handful of writers and intellectuals into the spotlight—one of the most notable being thirty-seven-year-old Canadian journalist Naomi Klein.

Early on, Klein benefited from an exceptional instance of good timing. Just as her first book, No Logo: Taking Aim a...

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