Secret History Of The American Empire

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Secret History Of The American Empire



The Secret History of The American Empire

When discussing the movers and shakers who made the last third of the 20th century so special, people tend to rattle off names like Mao Zedong, Richard Nixon, Yasir Arafat, Henry Kissinger, Pol Pot and Ronald Reagan. Yet if John Perkins, the author of "The Secret History of the American Empire," is to be believed, to that list must be added one more name: his own.

Perkins is the author of the fabulously successful, and in some quarters revered, "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man," which explains how cabals of wicked men like him have enabled perfidious corporations to seize control of the planet. Now, in a follow-up written not for crass financial gain but because he owes it to his fellow man, the promiscuously altruistic Perkins comes completely clean about the epochal role he has played in ruining life on earth.

After all, it was Perkins's work for a Boston consulting firm that allowed nefarious multinational corporations to plunder Indonesia, Perkins's acquisition of for-your-eyes-only population data from the mysterious "Dr. Asim" that enabled the Secret American Empire to take over Egypt, Perkins's covert missions in Saudi Arabia that sealed Saddam Hussein's fate, and Perkins's invention of an ingenious payment system that led directly to the destruction of Bolivia's economy. Thus, while the average person may think George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin are the ones who pull the strings on this planet, Perkins disabuses his readers of such naïveté. It is the economic hit men (E.H.M.'s) and their rough-and-tumble cousins, the corporate "jackals," all of them in the employ of the "corporatocracy," who decide who prospers, who starves, who lives, who dies. And, as is so often the case with deceptively omnipotent organizations, it is the Secret American Empire's ability ...
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