You are currently viewing Book Review: ‘Abundance,’ by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson

In “Abundance,” Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson prod fellow liberals to think beyond their despair over Trump’s return to power.

ABUNDANCE, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson

In 1833, John Adolphus Etzler, a German engineer who immigrated to Pittsburgh, announced that earthly paradise was suddenly in reach. Economic growth and modern technology were changing everything. Coal might run out, but humanity would harness wind, tidal and solar power. A trillion or more people could call this planet home, constructing islands across the seas to make room. And, as you built up land, you could drink directly from the ocean: Etzler was a follower of the wonkish French utopian Charles Fourier, who promised that the scientific reinvention of nature would transmute the saltwater into lemonade. After millenniums of austerity and poverty, the age of limitless “superabundance” was at hand.

Two centuries later, we remain so, so close. As Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson write

Keep reading this article on The New York Times Small Business.

Leave a Reply