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    The Monroe Doctrine is the foreign policy regarding domination of the America. This document was passed by President Fames Monroe in December 2‚ 1823. During this time‚ many of the countries in the South America already gain their independence from Europe. But the Europe still want to interfere. So President Monroe passed this doctrine to state the American standing point. The Monroe Doctrine stated that America would not allow or listen to any of the European intervention. It said that the intervention

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    Answer 1: Thomas Friedman‚ New York Times columnist and author‚ claims in his book titled‚ ‘The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century ’(2005)‚ that globalization and technology has flattened the world to a ‘level playing field’. He analyses the ten ‘flatteners’ or events that happened over a period of around ten years to make the world go flat. The first flattener‚ that Friedman writes about‚ was the Fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and end of the Cold War‚ that brought forward

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    The Monroe Doctrine is the most important policy during this time. It stated the further efforts by European nations to colonize land or interfere with states in North or South American would be viewed as acts of aggression requiring U.S. intervention. This policies primary objective was to free the newly independent colonies of Latin America from European intervention and to control what would make this New World a battle ground. The doctrine put forward that the New World and the Old World were

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    John Keynes and Milton Friedman were the most influential economists of the 20th century. Friedman spent much of his intellectual energy attacking the legacy of Keynes‚ it is natural to consider them opposites. Their differences were‚ indeed‚ profound and so was what they shared. Believe it or not‚ neither won or lost: today’s policy orthodoxies are a synthesis of their two approaches.( http://gecon.blogspot.com July 19‚ 2009) Some of there key differences were Keynes thought the great depression

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    economist and Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman published Capitalism and Freedom‚ a collection of essays that departs from mathematical economic models and instead unpacks economics’ real world relationship with public policy issues. In Chapter Eleven of Capitalism and Freedom‚ Friedman proposed a social policy called negative income tax (NIT) – a measure where individuals and families below a certain income level receive cash from the government‚ instead of paying taxes. Friedman argued that the $33 billion

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    The World is Flat by Thomas L. Friedman is best described as an exposé of the realities of the present day business world and of the effects that certain advances in technology as well as political upheavals have had on capitalism during the past three decades. The “flattening” of the world is a metaphor used to describe an increasing interconnectivity among the citizens of the world. This increase in interconnectivity is ascribed to several events such as the fall of the Berlin wall‚ and most

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    main purpose of the Monroe Doctrine‚ or the non-colonization principle‚ was a foreign policy that was intended to stop European colonization in the Western Hemisphere. President James Monroe established this doctrine in a speech to Congress in 1832. While the doctrine is named after the President that wrote the 1823 message to Congress‚ the Monroe Doctrine was originally the idea of Secretary of State‚ John Quincy Adams. Two main events convinced Adams that such a Doctrine was necessary. First‚ The

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    A Critique of “205 Easy Ways to Save the Earth” by Thomas Friedman Foreign affairs columnist for the New York Times‚ Thomas Friedman‚ is a man who wants to try to change the world by trying to convince people to go green. But‚ he is convinced that going green is not as easy as everyone makes it sound. His article “205 Easy Ways to Save the Earth‚” first published in 2007‚ presents several arguments attempting to convince people that while going green is difficult‚ it is possible. The author first

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    Conservative economists‚ such as Milton Friedman‚ claim that business is most responsible when it makes profit efficiently‚ not when it misapplies its energy on social projects‚ where as in contrast‚ consumer activists‚ such as Ralph Nader‚ spell out responsibilities that include corporate contribution to the enhancement to the social well being. In this paper‚ I will be discussing the fundamental idea behind the views of Milton Friedman and Ralph Nader towards Corporate Social

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    In1823 in his annual speech to congress President James Monroe he passed the Monroe Doctrine. President Monroe stated that America was the most powerful in the region. President Monroe addressed the new policies America would adopt in the western hemisphere. This was to insure to prevent any attack or interference from Europe or its neighboring countries near America. The Doctrine was looked at as Americas effort to show its power and presence within the region. Europe wanted to dominate the

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