ABSTRACT

In the 1980s, most Americans scoffed at the idea that the Communist empire could collapse - but Georgie Anne Geyer was already outlining that probability. In the 1990s, the world was stunned by wars that raged across post-Yugoslavia and their viciousness - but Geyer on a trip to Belgrade in 1989, interviewed top officials and anticipated the conflicts. When 9/11 occurred, she used common sense and said, 'This was inevitable - the terrorists had already attacked the World Trade Center in 1993 and criminals always return to the scene of the crime.'Geyer argues that while the United States was being praised everywhere during this era of 'indispensable power' as the 'greatest power the world has known,' it actually had started on the road to decline. It had won the Cold War, but had immediately embarked upon more Vietnam-like small wars of tremendous cost in Iraq and Afghanistan. Across the board, it was no longer paying its way, while its domestic culture was being vulgarized at every turn.This book explains how, when, and where these declines happened. Geyer studies the history of nations and of peoples, observes human nature, particularly as influenced by religion and ideology; and is a close analyst of the acts of men and women when they perceive they have been humiliated by others or by history. She warns Americans and journalists that we must anticipate the changes in the world before they are upon us and that we must employ predictions to strengthen our nation and its principles.

part I|18 pages

The Expectant Decade

chapter |2 pages

Soviet Empire Begins to Crack

chapter |3 pages

Groping toward Pluralism

chapter |1 pages

Iranian Children Herded to Death

chapter |2 pages

We Still Can’t Go Home Again

chapter |4 pages

Reagan Reforms: His View of Soviets

part II|78 pages

The Conceit of Innocence

chapter |2 pages

Poland’s Winning Ways with Freedom

chapter |2 pages

The Conceit of Innocence II

chapter |2 pages

Who Killed Sir Michael Rose?

chapter |2 pages

The United Nations and Neutralism

chapter |2 pages

Russians Slowly Learning New Way

chapter |2 pages

Unclear Indicator of the New Russia

chapter |3 pages

Kazakh Leader Grapples with Change

chapter |2 pages

Holland’s “Managed Morality”

chapter |3 pages

Seeking to Change Society by Force?

chapter |3 pages

Sadat’s Vision Made a Big Difference

chapter |2 pages

Lessons from the Death of a Cowboy

chapter |2 pages

What the Listeners Might Hear in Havana

chapter |3 pages

Shanghai Full of Life, But Going Where?

part III|36 pages

Terrorism an Era unto Itself

chapter |3 pages

Putin Arrives

chapter |3 pages

America is Losing Its Sense of Self

part IV|124 pages

Between Neutralism and Justice

chapter |3 pages

Journalism for the Sheer Joy of It

chapter |2 pages

“I Thought We Were Different”

chapter |3 pages

The Dark Heart of Dick Cheney

chapter |3 pages

Deconstructing Don Rumsfeld

chapter |2 pages

War Costs Endanger Our Future Security

chapter |3 pages

Questions of War

chapter |2 pages

Market “Magic” Relied on Greed

chapter |3 pages

U.S Can’t Afford More Mistakes

part V|42 pages

The Present as Future

chapter |2 pages

The Original Community Organizer

chapter |3 pages

Obama Strategy to End War by Making War

chapter |2 pages

Next Stop: Yemen

chapter |3 pages

Afghan Morass

chapter |3 pages

The Fault is in Ourselves

chapter |3 pages

Iraq War Still a Mistake

chapter |2 pages

Price of Peace in Europe

chapter |2 pages

Google in China

part VI|42 pages

Out of Time but in Space

chapter |2 pages

Vietnam Then Haiti Today

chapter |3 pages

Pacifist Policies, Appeasing Terrorism

chapter |2 pages

War on the Southern Border

chapter |2 pages

African Illusions and Realities

chapter |5 pages

A Trip to Polish Roots

chapter |2 pages

Summer Home: The Past is No More

chapter |3 pages

Lessons from the Chicago South Side

chapter |2 pages

A Graduate Comes Full Circle