Because the Future Matters: Let's Stop Letting Modern Economics and Our Energy Addiction Ruin Almost Everything!

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Politics, Economic Policy, Government, Public Policy
Cover of the book Because the Future Matters: Let's Stop Letting Modern Economics and Our Energy Addiction Ruin Almost Everything! by John M. Braden, John M. Braden
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Author: John M. Braden ISBN: 9781311118806
Publisher: John M. Braden Publication: November 10, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: John M. Braden
ISBN: 9781311118806
Publisher: John M. Braden
Publication: November 10, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Because the Future Matters: Let’s Stop Letting Modern Economics and Our Energy Addiction Ruin Almost Everything! takes as its starting point the importance of the fundamental role that energy in one form or another has always played—and will always play—in the economic life of human beings.
Very quickly, however, in Chapters 2 and 3, the author jumps right in with a set of energy-related proposals intended to go a long way towards remedying three major interconnected problems that are currently confronting Canada and much of the rest of the modern world: (1) increasingly serious environmental degradation, (2) the increasing likelihood of a sudden shortage of one or more key natural resources and (3) the increasing likelihood of a disastrous social breakdown.
Braden calls this set of proposals Intelligent National Frugality.
Once having introduced his proposals to the reader, he spends the rest of the book discussing what they are intended to accomplish, how, and why. He also argues that Intelligent National Frugality is as compatible with free enterprise as it is with socialism.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Because the Future Matters: Let’s Stop Letting Modern Economics and Our Energy Addiction Ruin Almost Everything! takes as its starting point the importance of the fundamental role that energy in one form or another has always played—and will always play—in the economic life of human beings.
Very quickly, however, in Chapters 2 and 3, the author jumps right in with a set of energy-related proposals intended to go a long way towards remedying three major interconnected problems that are currently confronting Canada and much of the rest of the modern world: (1) increasingly serious environmental degradation, (2) the increasing likelihood of a sudden shortage of one or more key natural resources and (3) the increasing likelihood of a disastrous social breakdown.
Braden calls this set of proposals Intelligent National Frugality.
Once having introduced his proposals to the reader, he spends the rest of the book discussing what they are intended to accomplish, how, and why. He also argues that Intelligent National Frugality is as compatible with free enterprise as it is with socialism.

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