He spends plenty of time on immigrant birth rates in Europe as compared to the native population, discussing how he thinks this will change the makeup of Europe in decades to come. The one area he touches on (but doesn't delve into nearly enough,) is how he sees America being changed demographically during the same span -- and if this change allows American exceptionalism (one of the themes of the book) to persist.
The post's title is ripped off from one of the final chapters. He says that it is an old Arabic proverb taken from the opening of Prayers for the Assassin. It's another way of saying that 'the street' respects the strong and savages the weak (backing the strong horse, and all that...).
The book ends with a passage from a late 19th century Sir Arthur Conan Doyle book (The Tragedy of the Korosko). It's almost funny to read -- one of the characters lamenting how Great Britain is forced to be the policeman to the world...even conspiracy theories that Great Britain invented a threat! Echoes of the present...
I recommend the book.
Short takes on other recent reads:
- Sam Harris' A Letter To A Christian Nation was last (too short, too lightweight; I liked The End of Faith better).
- William Easterly's The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics: Thumbs Up - Funny, Sad
- Chris Anderson's The Long Tail: Why The Future of Business is Selling Less of More. 256 pages for something that could have been communicated in 10.