Fareed zakaria and rafia zakaria dawn
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THE obituary for liberalism was perhaps prematurely written and published. A few months ago, when Donald J. Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States and announced his policy of ‘America First’ from his oath-taking pulpit, many mourned.
The premises which hold that states are moral creatures and that the purpose of the US is to spread the values of liberal democracy across the world seemed weaker than ever. They floundered further still in the months following as America itself, or rather America under Donald Trump, seemed uncommitted to liberalism itself, seeming to prefer a sort of direct democracy that would enable a strongman ruler who appointed his family to plum posts and ruled largely via executive orders that did not require legislative approval.
If not dead, liberalism seemed precipitously in decline, America looking increasingly inward, the world left to its own authoritarian futures. Trump wasn’t interested in the world, let alone policing the world; within weeks he had spurned the handshakes of America’s liberal allies and promised his supporters to uphold nationalism over liberalism. He thumbed his nose at Nato allies, promised he would drastically cut US diplomatic and aid programmes and hack off enormous portions of the UN budget provided
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Rafia Zakaria
American journalist and author
Rafia Zakaria is a Pakistani-American attorney, feminist, journalist, and author.[1] Zakaria is a columnist for Dawn. She has written for The Nation, Guardian Books, The New Republic, The Baffler, Boston Review, and Al Jazeera.[2] In , she published a book titled Against White Feminism, in which she critiques the emphasis that conventional feminist thought places on the experiences of white women while excluding women of color.[1]
Biography
[edit]Zakaria was born in Karachi, Pakistan, and was forced into an arranged marriage at 17 to a Pakistani-American man.[3] Zakaria fled from her abusive husband in when she was She entered law school and earned a postgraduate degree in political philosophy.[4] Zakaria is a Muslim and identifies as a Muslim feminist.[5] She has worked on behalf of victims of domestic abuse.[3]
Against White Feminism
[edit]In her book Against White Feminism, Zakaria critiqued the emphasis that conventional feminist thought places on the experiences of white women while excluding women of color.[6] The book was reviewed by numerous established publications, including The Guardian[7] and the Financial Times,