Thomas Friedman: The Power of Green
Be sure to check out Thomas Friedman’s cover story in Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, in which he mentions The First Law of Petropolitics, his FP cover story from last year’s May/June issue. Freidman’s groundbreaking essay, which details how rising oil prices empower autocratic regimes around the world, was recently nominated for a National Magazine ...
Be sure to check out Thomas Friedman’s cover story in Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, in which he mentions The First Law of Petropolitics, his FP cover story from last year’s May/June issue. Freidman’s groundbreaking essay, which details how rising oil prices empower autocratic regimes around the world, was recently nominated for a National Magazine Award.
So what is the First Law of Petropolitics?
The First Law of Petropolitics posits the following: The price of oil and the pace of freedom always move in opposite directions in oil-rich petrolist states. According to the First Law of Petropolitics, the higher the average global crude oil price rises, the more free speech, free press, free and fair elections, an independent judiciary, the rule of law, and independent political parties are eroded. And these negative trends are reinforced by the fact that the higher the price goes, the less petrolist leaders are sensitive to what the world thinks or says about them. Conversely, according to the First Law of Petropolitics, the lower the price of oil, the more petrolist countries are forced to move toward a political system and a society that is more transparent, more sensitive to opposition voices, and more focused on building the legal and educational structures that will maximize their people’s ability, both men’s and women’s, to compete, start new companies, and attract investments from abroad. The lower the price of crude oil falls, the more petrolist leaders are sensitive to what outside forces think of them.
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