On January 1, 2005, Sara Bongiorni's family embarked on a yearlong boycott of Chinese products. They wanted to see for themselves what it would take, in will power and creativity, to live without the world's fastest growing economy—and whether it could be done at all.
She thought that she didn't suggest that they buy only American goods, just not things from China.And she plan to go back to their own ways next January.First,She compare this thing to boycotting Wal-Mart .Still,there is a key different between a ban on wal-Mart and one on Chinese goods.Ultimately,boycotting Wal-Mart requires just one thing: keeping your hands on the steering wheel and accelerating past the entrance to its vast parking lot. China, by comparison,blankets the shelves of retailers across the land,and not just the big-box stores but also perfumed boutiques and softly lit department stores and the pages of the catalog that shimmy their way into million of American mailboxes each day. China will not be so easily avoided.
1 則留言:
I feel some of the sentences in the final paragraph are taken from the book (or the back of the book--someone's introduction of the book). Did you really write the whole thing? It's just more fluent and idiomatic than the rest of the journal.
If you do borrow someone's writing, you must acknowledge it.
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