The reading experience was decent, it was casual and felt conversational. But the content was seriously lacking. I was hoping that the author would point out instances where the West has culturally or actually oppressed the rest of the world by mislabelling them uncivilised. But instead, I received many irrelevant, but quite interesting, information on the author's life and things she has learned.
Instead, the author merely set out examples where the West has oppressed the rest, which is, if you are not living under a rock - not a surprise to anyone. There are quite a lot of pointless dialogue and information. I found the chapter on death interesting but completely irrelevant to the point she tried to make. The chapter on democracy seemed to carry the most amount of thought but still failed to convince me that labelling Western civilisation due to its democratic nature is mistaken; even when it is not Athenian democracy but a representative democracy system. It is quite true that being born rich and white has certainly its own overwhelming advantages in modern society. Yet, with globalisation and mass immigration, you start to see more and more immigrant politicians. Working class politicians are also making a comeback in Western countries. The author stated that under representative democracy, citizens are allowed only the right to choose who writes the policies but not what the policies are. This may be true but with proper scrutiny and public interests, the public can impose significant influence on policies. Of course, you have issues such as mass media control and corruption, but the public can always vote the party out; in the grander scheme of things, two presidential terms are short. Compared with other democratic systems on Earth, it is clear that representative democracy is the only system under which a country can be effectively governed by a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. The Athenian democracy for the 60,000 adult male voters at that time may have worked. For the modern day UK and the USA, with the world being a more complicated place, more interests and stakeholders involved, a direct democracy would be unthinkable and disastrous even for 60,000 Americans.
Like many academics, the author cite indigenous cultures as proof that there can be a better way, of agriculture (Australia), of governance, and of way of living. Unfortunately, like the problem of democracy above, none of these seemingly sustainable things would work with the current population. Unless, we purport to eliminate the majority of the world and return to the ages where we live in simple and humble tribes of 50 and get to hunt and live a nomadic lifestyle, a reminiscence of this 'sustainable' lifestyle is impractical.