Cracked, Jagged and Leaderless: The World is No Longer Flat
Did 2025 mark the formal end of the neoliberal age? Gary Gerstle, author of The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order, has already written neoliberalism’s official obituary, so he’s quite comfortable with a post neoliberal world. But Trump 2.0, Gerstle suggests, marks the formal beginning of America’s place in this new cracked, jagged and leaderless world. What most defines it, Gerstle suggests, is its absence of “flatness” - Tom Friedman’s term to describe a world simultaneously “flat” and yet dominated by singularly American ideas, economics and power. The ironic thing about Trump 2.0 is that, for all his bluster, his America is just another player in this post Pax Americana economic and political system. His “place in the history books is secure,” Gerstle says about Trump. But it may not exactly be the place that the MAGA leader wants to be.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Hopwood DePree: What One American Learnt From Restoring His Family's English Castle
Aaron Friedberg: Why China, Not Russia, Is Our Greatest Threat And What We Should Do About It
Sasha Issenberg: What America's Long Struggle for Same-Sex Marriage Can Teach Us About the Possibility of Gun Control
Erin Swan: How a First Novel About America's Vanished Earth Took 6 Years to Write and 30 Years to Plan
Nirit Weiss-Blatt: Why the Techlash Has Gone Too Far
Helene Munson on Hitler's Boy Soldiers: Can Germans Ever Forget the Second World War?
Kerri Arsenault and Bathsheba Demuth: How to Tell Effective Stories About the Environment
Jon Taffer: Why the Real Power of Conflict Is About Respect Rather Than Violence
Hal Weitzman: Why Delaware Is At the Root of Everything That Is Wrong With America
George Stevens, Jr.: Remembering (And Mourning) The Golden Age of Hollywood and Washington D.C.
Dov Seidman: How to Make American Capitalism Moral (Or, At Least, Try To)
Marcus Buckingham: Why Work Sometimes Does, Indeed, Love Us Back
Arthur Grace: Photographing Communism(s) and What Life Really Looked Like in Cold War Eastern Europe