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1 " It is time to re-imagine how life is organized on Earth. We’re accelerating into a future shaped less by countries than by connectivity. Mankind has a new maxim – Connectivity is destiny – and the most connected powers, and people, will win. "
― Parag Khanna , Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization
2 " Billions of Asians growing up in the past two decades have experienced geopolitical stability, rapidly expanding prosperity, and surging national pride. The world they know is one not of Western dominance but of Asian ascendance. "
― Parag Khanna , The Future Is Asian
3 " Cities are mankind's most enduring and stable mode of social organization, outlasting all empires and nations over which they have presided. "
4 " Competitive connectivity is the arms race of the twenty-first century. "
5 " the new nationalists (especially in the West) cater largely to an older generation, with one foot in the grave—and will follow them into it. They represent the last hurrah of a white overclass that managed to masquerade its identity politics as the national interest. "
― Parag Khanna , Move: The Forces Uprooting Us and Shaping Humanity's Destiny
6 " Few fields on an online form annoy a young professional more than “Address.” Does it mean they’ll have to wait for a letter and physically sign a form? What if they no longer live there in a few months? Will they have to get the mail forwarded? Why does anyone still use paper anyway? "
7 " The worst Covid-19 infection rates were in countries with populist nationalist regimes such as the US, UK, India, and Brazil. "
8 " Global order is no longer something that can be dictated or controlled from the top down. Globalization is itself the order. "
9 " By 2026 and certainly thereafter, hundreds more colleges will go defunct. How do we know? Because exactly eighteen years after the baby bust of 2008, the number of American high school graduates will fall off a cliff. Those who had been planning on attending college nearby may pack up and leave for good, joining college employees who have no reason to stick around, together turning once thriving towns into dust bowls. The southern US will be hit hardest, as it represents nearly 45 percent of American high schoolers as well as the most colleges closing shop. (In Texas, only 56 percent of high school students go to college anyway.) The South will only be able to revive its local economies by attracting people—natives or foreigners—willing to uplift these dilapidated communities "
10 " Even if America brings in five hundred thousand new migrants per year, in 2030 its GDP will still be $1 trillion smaller than it was in 2020.2 And right now, even half a million migrants would be a big stretch. After five consecutive years of gaining more than 1 million new migrants annually, net migration plummeted in 2019 to just over two hundred thousand. America isn’t even taking in enough migrants to replace its existing workforce: More than 1 million baby boomers (out of 80 million) are retiring each year, hence almost all counties are suffering a decline in the number of workers.3 Given America’s low fertility and rapid aging, immigration is the only reason the population is growing at all. "
11 " The five largest criminal syndicates—Japan’s Yakuza, the Russian Bratva, Italy’s Camorra and ’Ndrangheta, and Mexico’s Sinaloa—have globalized the reach of their operations and rake in an estimated $1 trillion per year as they bridge the supply and demand for rhino horns, counterfeit currency, synthetic drugs, and prostitutes. "
12 " We are all in search of the right combination of latitude and attitude. The future of human mobility points in just one direction: more. The coming decades could witness billions of people on the move, shifting from south to north, from coast to inland, from low-lying to higher-elevation, from overpriced to affordable, from failing to stable societies. "