Thomas Friedman is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist, columnist and writer passionately writing about cultural, political and economic issues. His indulgence is expressed through many valuable books: From Beirut to Jerusalem (1983), The Lexus and The Olive Tree: Understanding Globalization (2000), Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution-And How It Can Renew America (2008). Although the book “The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century” (2005) made a name of Friedman but the book “Longitudes and Attitudes: Explaining the World after September 11” (2002) is the greatest book that makes American people recognize themselves in the new world full of complex connections. "Globalization: The Super-Story" by Thomas Friedman is an article about the deep meaning of globalization in his eyes. By comparing and contrasting between the Cold War system that was characterized by a single word: wall - the Berlin Wall” and the globalization system that is symbolized by a single world “Web-the World Wide Web,” Friedman has been successful in using two illustrations (392). In the Cold War, we reached for the hotline, which was a symbol that we were divided but at least two people-the leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union were in charge. By contrast, in the globalization system we reach for the Internet, which is a symbol that we are all connected. Friedman also states that the globalization system leaves "nobody is quiet in charge" (392). By his own knowledge, Friedman offers his own definition – a key of all the concepts: I define globalization as the inexorable integration of markets, transportation systems, and communications systems to a degree never witnessed before-in a way that is enabling corporations, countries, and individuals to reach around the world in farther, faster, deeper, and cheaper than ever before, and in a way that is enabling the world to reach into corporations, countries and individuals farther, faster, deeper, and cheaper than ever before. (392) Guiding readers step by step, Friedman comes to the main idea by introducing three balances that are very important to the globalization system. They are all characterized by single word "power." The power is divided between nation-states, global markets and individuals. The United States is used as an evidence for these balances through the whole article sin