Very interesting Rikard. I just read a 'short' entitled the Pakistani-Peruvian Axis which describes in detail the absorbtion of "Arabic Outlook" by Christianity and its spread to the Americas, particularly South. And NY.
(I don't agree with all .... but many main points are extremely compelling. )
;;;;;;; short excerpt of a short article
"Carroll Quigley, in the course of his examination of the failure of most Latin American / South American nations-states, delivered an astonishing analysis of what he believed to be the root cause of these failures in the first edition (1966) of his renowned Tragedy and Hope. Here, in almost an aside, he defines what he calls the "Pakistani-Peruvian axis" - a combination of Asian despotism and Arabic outlook (key word, that - outlook), both of which have their roots in Bronze Age antiquity, that pervade what Quigley calls the shattered cultures that dwell on its axis from Pakistan to the mountains of South America. This analysis makes an appalling sense out the cultural train-wrecks that persist to this day from the Arabic East, through the southern Mediterranean and Spain to South America - and in corporate boardrooms in Paris, London and New York."
Very interesting Rikard. I just read a 'short' entitled the Pakistani-Peruvian Axis which describes in detail the absorbtion of "Arabic Outlook" by Christianity and its spread to the Americas, particularly South. And NY.
(I don't agree with all .... but many main points are extremely compelling. )
;;;;;;; short excerpt of a short article
"Carroll Quigley, in the course of his examination of the failure of most Latin American / South American nations-states, delivered an astonishing analysis of what he believed to be the root cause of these failures in the first edition (1966) of his renowned Tragedy and Hope. Here, in almost an aside, he defines what he calls the "Pakistani-Peruvian axis" - a combination of Asian despotism and Arabic outlook (key word, that - outlook), both of which have their roots in Bronze Age antiquity, that pervade what Quigley calls the shattered cultures that dwell on its axis from Pakistan to the mountains of South America. This analysis makes an appalling sense out the cultural train-wrecks that persist to this day from the Arabic East, through the southern Mediterranean and Spain to South America - and in corporate boardrooms in Paris, London and New York."
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2807571/posts