Status Updates From Capitalism: A Global History
Capitalism: A Global History by
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Gerhard
is on page 893 of 1343
By the twenty-first century, the capitalist revolution had arrived almost everywhere and impacted virtually all spheres of life. Expansive and radical, it remains the most consequential revolution in world history.
— Jul 02, 2026 04:42PM
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Richard
is on page 725 of 1344
“Marginalist revolution” in economic thought represented “the intellectual enclosure” of European thought about Economics (particularly Marshall’s development of microeconomics and partial equilibrium.) Dehistoricized, mathematized, and ostensibly immune to the machinations of politics economics moved to place itself in the company of the Natural sciences.
— Jul 02, 2026 01:08PM
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Richard
is on page 731 of 1344
America achieved such integration by “relentless war with the continent’s Indigenous people.” European colonial powers meanwhile achieved similar ends via conquering peoples and lands of Asia and Africa. Landlocked Germany - late to the colonial party - would need to achieve similar ends in Europe itself
— Jul 02, 2026 01:00PM
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Richard
is on page 731 of 1344
Interesting insights on German motivation for WW1 with explication of A.D. Chandler’s idea that German industrialists sought “horizontal and vertical integration of their businesses through military means” as a response to the “American danger.”
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— Jul 02, 2026 01:00PM
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Gerhard
is on page 840 of 1343
As the world’s most influential neoliberal, Friedrich Hayek, put it in 1981: “I personally prefer a liberal dictator to a democratic government lacking liberalism.”
— Jun 30, 2026 01:48PM
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Gerhard
is on page 831 of 1343
Attacking the giant bureaucratic machine of the university, Berkeley students pronounced that “I will not be folded, spindled, or mutilated,” a play on the Do Not Fold, Spindle, or Mutilate punch cards that fed data into computers at the time.
— Jun 30, 2026 01:38PM
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Gerhard
is on page 810 of 1343
Not only did the golden years end, but so did the whole order of industrial capitalism that had risen since the 1870s. The 1970s were no mere blip—they were an epochal break in capitalism’s history.
— Jun 30, 2026 01:31PM
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Gerhard
is on page 800 of 1343
The many consequential social, economic, and institutional departures of the golden age also accelerated the basic impetus of the capitalist revolution as capital owners pushed the logic of commodification into new areas of the world and new nooks and crannies of society.
— Jun 30, 2026 01:11PM
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Gerhard
is on page 781 of 1343
Thanks to better feed and the use of antibiotics, a cow in Germany produced 3,800 liters of milk per year in 1970, compared with just 2,500 liters in 1950, and hens laid 216 instead of 120 eggs annually.
— Jun 30, 2026 12:54PM
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Gerhard
is on page 771 of 1343
As wages increased during the 1950s, Japanese workers were able to purchase durable consumer goods such as televisions, refrigerators, and washing machines, collectively known as the “three sacred treasures.” By the 1960s, these “treasures” were replaced by the “three Cs” (color TVs, coolers [air conditioners], and cars).
— Jun 30, 2026 12:48PM
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Gerhard
is on page 757 of 1343
For all the disappointments, shortcomings, and failures that would surface (especially after 1970), decolonization ignited significant economic growth of 2 or 3 percent per year throughout much of Asia and Africa after many decades, or even centuries, of no growth at all.
— Jun 30, 2026 12:41PM
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Gerhard
is on page 744 of 1343
...colonialism unraveled at astounding speed. In just three decades after 1945, almost all colonies gained their independence. What had one day seemed, to many Europeans, to be the nearly natural order, essential to the upkeep of the world economy, even to civilization as such, became irrelevant the next.
— Jun 30, 2026 12:32PM
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