Why have countries like Japan, Singapore, South Korea lived through repeated world economic crises and survived?Why are these
economies still in the top-ten achievers since the 1980s?What can we learn from their ways of dealing with economics, politics and the world?These questions can simply be answered by longtime established principles:autonomy, cleverness, flexibility and self-sufficiency.The answer is to ban globalism,
liberalism and to adopt a political economic system that allows for tapping into worldwide economic resources and yet retaining the main components of a healthy state of the economy:
nationalism, integrity and self-reliance.The world is not divided along the line west and east, like so many economists and analysts have indulged themselves into believing for so many years: the world is made of a myriad of self-sustaining entities, some more complex than others, much in the way of cells or atoms function within a structure.Surrendering the cell to the control of a sick or diseased larger entity is to condemn it to perish with the rest of the decaying structure.These arguments and other convincing evidence both on the political and the economical side of the issue of nationalist politics, are developed in this new book in a simple yet entertaining way.