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Great opening paragraph from David Harvey's book I've just added to my autodidact mixture of fun fact books

"Crises are essential to the reproduction of capitalism. It is in the course of crises that the instabilities of capitalism are confronted, reshaped and re-engineered to create a new version of what capitalism is about. Much gets torn down and laid waste to make way for the new. Once-productive landscapes are turned into industrial waste-lands, old factories are torn down or converted to new uses, working-class neighbourhoods get gentrified. Elsewhere, small farms and peasant holdings are displaced by large-scale industrialised agriculture or by sleek new factories. Business parks, R&D and wholesale warehousing and distribution centres sprawl across the land in the midst of suburban tract housing, linked together with clover-leafed highways. Central cities compete with how tall and glamorous their office towers and iconic cultural buildings might be, mega-shopping malls galore proliferate in city and suburb alike, some even doubling as airports through which hordes of tourists and business executives ceaselessly pass in a world gone cosmopolitan by default. Golf courses and gated communities pioneered in the USA can now be seen in China, Chile and India, contrasting with sprawling squatter and self-built settlements officially designated as slums, favelas or barrios pobres." (from "Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism" by "David Harvey").
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Smart words. But it's kinda like saying history repeats itself, which becomes a tautology in this sense. We look for the same and find the same.

In history books, if we outlive this time, doubtful, those books may come with new learning about real cooperation and community towards building something beyond capital.
MrAlmostCrazy · 46-50, M
@awildsheepschase Yeah, he's just getting started, thanks for your insight!!
@MrAlmostCrazy Thank you for the prompt of reading something interesting I had not read..