Fw: NP - Jamie Dimon and the Gambling Away of All of Us
alice wellintown
alicewellintown at gmail.com
Thu Jun 14 04:31:26 CDT 2012
And, Dimon fits into a Pynchon work because of the tragic ironies that
surround him: the depression in parts of Europe and the German
strength that hold it in place, the resiliancy of the dyanmic and
surely Graced and Blessed UNITED States of America, the fear and
surrender of the young, a generation that eagerly embraced an
education, and what it was driven by and toward--the free markets,
deregulated business, innovation in finance and in technologies,
immigration and the global work place-- a goal that now seems seems
too painful to continue, though we know they will get over it. The
forces of globalization, it seems, are not films, but are
irreversible. In the end, Diamon will save the poor and ordianry and
lift them to the level of the Westerners. Yes, ironies abound.
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