Buy and read these books to support the courageous writers who bring these facts
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Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them - Al Franken Hardcover
| Audio Read by Al Franken: Cassette
| CD.
New
York Times Book Review: "Funny, angry, and intelligent." Newsweek: "Wickedly
funny." Washington Post Book World: "This guy Al Franken is nasty. He's mean.
He's vicious. He is, in short, the perfect guy to write a book attacking
America's nasty, mean, vicious right-wing pols, pundits and preachers. But
Franken has something that his targets conspicuously lack -- a sense of humor.
This book is laugh-out-loud funny...."
"Franken's methodology is simple:
He takes statements his subjects have written or uttered on TV, and he tries to
determine if they're, you know, true. Frequently they are
not...."
"Franken uncovers countless lies, and he does it with brio, but
his book barely scratches the surface of the Bush administration's
well-documented mendacity...."
Also by Al Franken: Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat
Idiot and Other Observations Paperback
| Hard
Cover | Audio, Read by Al Franken: Cassette
| Download.
Amazon.com:
Rush Limbaugh claims his talent is on loan. With this book, Franken demonstrates
that he owns. The frankly Democratic author's shtick reminds us how much of a
free ride conservatives have gotten in the mainstream media.
For
instance, he really drives home the weirdness of the conservatives' preachiness
about "family values" in light of Newt Gingrich's and Bob Dole's first
marriages, and Rush Limbaugh's first, second and third marriages. And he has
great fun with Rush's and Newt's miraculous draft deferments in a chapter where
he imagines all of the great conservative "chicken-hawks" out on a Vietnam war
patrol under the leadership of Ollie North.
Publishers Weekly: Franken,
a writer and performer on Saturday Night Live and in feature films, does to
Limbaugh what the conservative talk-show host has been doing to Democratic
politicians for years. Using [their] admitted half-truths and out-of-context
quotes, he skewers Rush & Friends as no liberal has done in
years.
Franken does a retrospective of Limbaugh's life from when he "fed
off the largesse of the government in the form of unemployment insurance"; how
he failed to register to vote until he was 35; how he used two airline coach
seats to fit his opulent hind-quarters; and how he got a 4-F deferment because
of a pilonidal cyst.
There are two hilarious sketches: "My 'Conversation'
with Rush Limbaugh" uses out-of-context quotes to corner Rush in much the same
way that Limbaugh once had a "conversation" with Hillary Clinton; and "Operation
Chickenhawk," with Ollie North leading Vietnam draft-dodgers Limbaugh, Quayle,
Buchanan, George Will and Clarence Thomas to their demises in Asian rice
paddies.
Marta Steele's 2004
Activist Calendar to Support On-Site Activist Reporting, "Where the
Mainstream Fears to Tread."
Marta Steele of Words, UnLtd. (http://www.wordsunltd.com/) has been
covering progressive rallies, protests, and marches, as well as panel
discussions and forums since April 2001. Her Activist Calendar 2004 uses
original digital photography, direct quotations, and thumbnail memories to
recall each step in our momentous path back toward Washington, DC, and
democracy. For more, visit the ad (and linger at her website) at http://www.wordsunltd.com/calendar2004.htm.
The
Woman Who Wouldn't Talk - Susan McDougal - Hardcover.
Publishers
Weekly: "There were four people who knew what went on in Whitewater," McDougal
explains in her wry memoir (cowritten with a close friend and legal advisor).
"Two of them were in the White House," and not about to talk, while McDougal's
ex-husband, Jim, lacked credibility, leaving her as the sole credible witness.
The problem was that nobody in the media or the office of independent counsel
Ken Starr wanted to hear what she had to say: that Whitewater was just "a stupid
land deal that went bad," and the McDougals weren't all that close to the
Clintons anyway.
McDougal offers up her full life story, including an
Arkansas childhood and the raunchy antics of the Clinton-run statehouse, and
details her turbulent marriage to Jim McDougal, exacerbated by his
long-undiagnosed manic-depression. But she knows that readers want to learn
about-her experiences being grilled, then jailed for contempt for refusing to
give Starr his smoking gun-and she lays on the horrific details with righteous
fury.
The War
on Freedom: How and Why America was Attacked, September 11, 2001 - Nafeez
Mosaddeq Ahmed - Paperback: 400 pages.
Amazon Book Description: A
disturbing expose' of the American government's hidden agenda, before and after
the Sept.11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A wide range of documents show U.S.
officials knew in advance of the "Boeing bombing" plot, yet did nothing. Did the
attacks fit in with plans for a more aggressive U.S. foreign policy?
Nafeez Ahmed examines the evidence, direct and circumstantial, and lays
it before the public in chilling detail: how FBI agents who uncovered the
hijacking plot were muzzled, how CIA agents trained Al Qaeda members in terror
tactics, how the Bush family profited from its business connections to the Bin
Ladens, and from the Afghan war. A "must read" for anyone seeking to understand
America's New War on Terror.
Buck
Up, Suck Up... and Come Back When You Foul Up - James Carville and Paul
Begala - Hardcover: 224 pages.
Even if you fervently disagree with the
party bias they tout proudly and often, you probably concur that Democratic
political consultants Paul Begala and James Carville know what it takes to craft
a winning strategy. In Buck Up, Suck Up... and Come Back When You Foul Up, the
two lay out 12 of the rules they developed while separately and jointly
masterminding some of the hottest political races in recent years.
And
with entertaining and enlightening behind-the-scenes anecdotes drawn from both
effective and futile experiences along the campaign trail - most notably their
work with Bill Clinton during his two presidential terms - Begala and Carville
present a practical course that can be followed in business as well as politics.
"If the audience you're trying to reach is smaller than the one hundred
million voters we spend our time trying to reach," they write, "we believe these
lessons are even more important because your target audience is even more
sophisticated, even more interested, even more up-to-the-minute."
Shrub:
The Short but Happy Political Life of George W. Bush - Molly Ivins and Lou
Dubose - Paperback: 193 pages.
Amazon.com review: "Youthful political
reporters are always told there are three ways to judge a politician," write
Molly Ivins and Lou Dubose in Shrub. "The first is to look at the record. The
second is to look at the record. And third, look at the record."
The
record under scrutiny in this brief, informative book belongs to one George W.
Bush - dubbed "Shrub" by Ivins - governor of Texas and 2000 presidential
hopeful. These two veteran journalists know how politics are played in Texas and
they've done their homework, writing a comprehensive examination of Bush's
professional and political life that's a lively read, to boot.
And if the title alone doesn't convey their particular slant, perhaps the
following caveat from the introduction will: "If, at the end of this short book,
you find W. Bush's political resume' a little light, don't blame us. There's
really not much there. We have been looking for six years."
Beginning
with his admission to the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War (where he
bypassed a waiting list of about 100,000), the authors go on to deconstruct his
losing congressional bid, his failed career as an oil executive, and his role as
managing partner of the Texas Rangers baseball team, revealing how he was helped
every step of the way by wealthy and influential friends of the family.
The
Best Democracy Money Can Buy - An Investigative Reporter Exposes the Truth
about Globalization Corporate Cons, and High Finance Fraudsters - Greg Palast -
Updated
Paperback | Hardcover
The
Village Voice wrote: "The guts for [Michael] Moore's screed on the 2000 election
came from Greg Palast." Vincent Bugliosi, author of "None Dare Call it Treason
and "Helter Skelter" writes: "Palast is astonishing, he gets the real evidence
no one else has the guts to dig up."
C-Span TV calls Palast "The last of
the great journalists." Alan Colmes, Fox Television network says "He is
America's journalist hero of the Internet." The Village Voice, May 24, 2002
review: "[H]is book provides a road map for other journalists...Let's hope more
DIY muckrakers heed the call."
Book Description: Award-winning
investigative journalist Greg Palast digs deep to unearth the ugly facts that
few reporters working anywhere in the world today have the courage or ability to
cover. From East Timor to Waco, he has exposed some of the most egregious cases
of political corruption, corporate fraud, and financial manipulation in the US
and abroad. His uncanny investigative skills as well as his no-holds-barred
style have made him an anathema among magnates on four continents and a living
legend among his colleagues and his devoted readership.
Made In
Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics -
Michael Lind - Hardcover: 224 pages.
Publishers Weekly: Lind (The
Radical Center: The Future of American Politics) delves deep into the heart
of George W. Bush's Texas, and what he finds may give moderates pause and send
liberals scurrying. According to Lind (a fifth-generation Texan), the politics
of West Texas are steeped in racism, environmental exploitation, jingoistic
militarism, crony capitalism, an anti-public education bias and a fundamentalist
evangelicalism inconsistent with the separation of church and state.
About President Bush's relation to these beliefs, Lind in part merely
implies it by association, saying, "Cultural geography is of little use in
analyzing the personalities of politicians-but it is indispensable in
understanding their politics." However, Lind argues, with considerable verve,
that the constellation of political beliefs embodying Bush-style politics is
designed to exploit the nation's natural and human resources for the benefit of
a powerful oligarchy.
According to Lind, Bush's election translates to
the "capture... of the vast power of the federal apparatus by Southern
reactionaries...." and is "a threat to the peace and well-being not only of
America but of the world."
Is Our
Children Learning?: The Case Against George W. Bush - Paul Begala -
Paperback: 160 pages.
James Carville says, "Every Democrat should
memorize this book, every Independent should read it, and every Republican
should fear it."
Book Description: He was a poor student who somehow got
into the finest schools. He was a National Guardsman who somehow missed a year
of service. He was a failed businessman who somehow was made rich. He was a
minority investor who somehow was made managing partner of the Texas Rangers. He
was a defeated politician who somehow was made governor. You can hardly blame
him for expecting to inherit the White House.
"Is Our Children
Learning?" examines the public life and public record of George W. Bush and
reveals him for who he is: a man who presents the thinnest, weakest, least
impressive record in public life of any major party nominee this century; a man
who at every critical juncture has been propelled upward by the forces of
wealth, privilege, status, and special interests who use his family's name for
their private gain. A Texan, political analyst, strategist, and partisan, Paul
Begala has written a devastating assessment of the Bush brand of politics.
War on
Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know - William Rivers Pitt with
Scott Ritter - Paperback: 96 pages.
Book Description: War on Iraq offers
a balanced, non-partisan examination of the current debate in Washington and
beyond. In this shocking expose on the impending offensive against Iraq,
activist, author, and teacher William Rivers Pitt sits down with former U.N.
weapons inspector Scott Ritter to expose the truth behind the hawkish rhetoric
of the Bush administration.
Ritter - ex-Marine, intelligence specialist, expert on Iraqi military
strategy, and Gulf War veteran - dismantles the myths surrounding Saddam
Hussein's biological, chemical and nuclear weapons capabilities while revealing
the neo-conservative forces pushing the White House toward war.
During
the seven years the inspections took place, Ritter and other inspectors were
able to confirm that Iraq's chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons programs
were effectively destroyed, counter to current White House claims.
Pitt
and Ritter also explain the lack of any plausible link between Saddam Hussein
and Al Qaeda, and highlight the absurdity of forcing democracy on a nation that
has been divided for centuries. The book closes with a stark forecast for
American troops if a ground war ensues and urges the White House to seek a
diplomatic solution. A complete listing of contact information for U.S. senators
as well as outreach and activist resources is included.
The
Bush Dyslexicon: Observations on a National Disorder - Mark Crispin Miller -
Paperback: 370 pages.
Publishers Weekly: Miller, a New York University
professor of media studies, has fashioned a devastating compendium of President
George W. Bush's grammatical gaffes, syntactical shipwrecks, mind-boggling
malapropisms and simply dumb comments. Page after page (after page) of
quotations, suggests Miller, reveal that Bush is a man who, while not stupid, is
prodigiously illiterate and woefully uneducated. Further, and compounding the
problem, Bush could not care less about these shortcomings.
How then,
Miller asks, and this is his larger concern, did someone in Miller's opinion so
obviously unqualified to be president convince so many voters that he was?
Miller's answer is, in a word, television: Bush succeeded on TV not despite his
"utter superficiality," but because his superficiality blended seamlessly with
the vacuous culture of the tube.
It was not simply that Bush's handlers
were able to manipulate his image, attempting to construct out of his ignorance
an anti-intellectual "good ole boy" persona, but that news professionals in the
medium were all too willing to go along with this ploy. They went along because
the pundits of TV have become, according to Miller, increasingly right-wing,
thus natural Bush allies, but also because they no longer care to talk about
substance, preferring instead discussion of "likability" and other attributes of
pure image.
We're
Right, They're Wrong: A Handbook for Spirited Progressives - James Carville
- Paperback: 183 pages.
From Booklist: Despondent Democrats and lonely
liberals will discover an arsenal of ammunition for election-year debates in the
Ragin' Cajun's chatty, pointed survey of the differences between the Democratic
and Republican Parties' visions of the U.S. and why these differences
matter.
One can almost see the sneaky twinkle in Carville's eye-and the
light reflecting off his skull-as he quotes GOP myths and debunks them,
challenging antigovernment rhetoric with long lists of "Things Government Does
Right," from the GI Bill and Head Start to the Clean Air Act, Meals-on-Wheels,
and the earned income tax credit.
About a third of the book is devoted
to rapid responses and extended answers to standard Republican rhetoric on the
Reagan-Bush years, welfare, taxes, and the crimes of big government; other
chapters cover jobs and income disparity, "family values" as a Democratic issue,
education, health care, race, and what progressives can and should
do.
For hungry readers, Carville includes a couple of recipes; for those
who need a good laugh, he offers sidebars-e.g., top 10 lists, particularly
ludicrous GOP statements-and a brief transcript of his guest spot on an
imaginary Sunday morning chat show called "Press the Meat." Fast, funny,
energizing: expect requests. - Mary Carroll.
The
Betrayal of America: How the Supreme Court Undermined the Constitution and Chose
Our President - Vincent Bugliosi, Molly Ivins (Foreword), Gerry Spence -
Paperback: 164 pages.
Publishers Weekly: On December 12th, 2000, in a 5-4
decision, the U. S. Supreme Court put an end to the recounting of presidential
votes in Florida, thus assuring that George W. Bush would win the election.
This action by the Court's majority, argues trial lawyer and bestselling
author Bugliosi, was a "judicial coup d'tat" that stole the election from U.S.
citizens and simply handed the presidency over to the Court's guy, a
conservative Republican like themselves.
It was also treasonous, asserts
Bugliosi, if not by statute it does not fit the legal definition of treason at
least in spirit; the five justices are "criminals in the very truest sense of
the word," he says, who have exhibited "the morals of an alley cat."
The
Florida recount, claimed the Court, was invalid because it violated the equal
protection clause of the 14th Amendment; as different counties used different
methods for determining voter intent, voters were being treated unequally.
Bugliosi argues, in precise yet accessible language, on page after page,
that this justification does not stand up to scrutiny; that it is an incorrect
and unprecedented use of the equal protection clause, feebly applied and argued,
and was simply the best excuse the Court majority could come up with.
Bugliosi, perhaps best known as the author of Helter Skelter, often
writes with the subtlety of a professional wrestler, but here he diverges from
much of the outrage that passes for political commentary these days by backing
up his bluster with careful legal analysis.
Blinded
by the Right: The Conscience of an Ex-Conservative - David Brock -
Hardcover: 288 pages.
Amazon.com review: David Brock made his name (and
big money) by trashing Anita Hill as "a little bit nutty and a little bit
slutty." But it was Brock's reporting that was nutty and slutty, he confesses in
the riveting memoir Blinded by the Right.
He absolves Hill; claims he
helped Clarence Thomas threaten another witness into backing down; portrays a
ghastly right-wing Clinton-bashing conspiracy of hypocrites, zillionaires, and
maniacs; and accuses himself of being "a witting cog in the Republican sleaze
machine."
Now Brock is sliming his former fellows-everyone from the
lawyer who argued the Bush v. Gore case to gonzo pundits Ann Coulter and Laura
Ingraham ("the only person I knew who didn't appear to own a book or regularly
read a newspaper") to Matt Drudge and Tom Wolfe. Brock excoriates the gay
hypocrites of the right wing, including himself, and tells how he cleverly spun
his own outing.
It's
Still the Economy, Stupid: George W. Bush, The GOP's CEO - Paul Begala -
Paperback: 208 pages.
Tom Daschle Senate Leader wrote: "Paul Begala is
one Texan who really understands the economy. It's Still the Economy, Stupid is
a good read that makes great sense."
Book Description: When he took
office in 2001, George W. Bush inherited the strongest economy in American
history. He inherited the largest federal budget surplus in American history -
and the prospect of paying off the entire national debt in just eight years.
He inherited a strong dollar and sound fiscal policy. He inherited a nation
whose economy was so strong that commentators who just a decade before were
predicting American decline were now complaining about American dominance.
And yet, Dubya blew it. Squandered everything he'd inherited from
President Clinton. We thought if Junior was good at anything, it was inheriting
things. It's Still the Economy, Stupid is the story of how America's CEO - our
first MBA president - has trashed our economy.
Into
the Buzzsaw: Leading Journalists Expose the Myth of a Free Press - Kristina
Borjesson Editor), Gore Vidal (Foreword) - Hardcover: 392 pages.
From
Library Journal: Significant stories by investigative reporters do not always
reach the air or find their way into print; some of them get caught in "the
buzzsaw" that rips through both their reporting and their reputations.
Borjesson, an Emmy Award-winning reporter, pulls together 18 essays
written by journalists who have either personally experienced this buzzsaw or
who have closely observed the media industry. Her own reporting on TWA Flight
800 for CBS made her a target of the FBI, who interfered with her investigative
work. She was harassed, her computer and reporter's notebook were stolen, and in
the end CBS fired her. The experience changed her perception of the media
establishment.
Her colleagues here detail accounts of their own buzzsaw
encounters covering such stories as Florida's voting in the recent presidential
election, Tailwind, a massacre during the Korean War, and CIA involvement with
the drug trade.
A biographical sketch precedes each piece. This book
would have benefited from a more substantial introduction to provide adequate
context, but Robert McChesney's closing essay on the history of professional
journalism does underscore the fragile state of reporting. Recommended for all
academic journalism collections and public libraries where media books circulate
well. Judy Solberg, George Washington Univ. Lib., Washington, DC
Forbidden
Truth: U.S.-Taliban Secret Oil Diplomacy
Saudi Arabia and the Failed Search
for bin Laden - Jean-Charles Brisard, Guillaume Dasquie, Wayne
Madsen,
Lucy Rounds (Translator) - Paperback: 208 pages.
From
Booklist: There's been a lot of prepublication buzz about this book, especially
on the Web. A best-seller in Europe and banned in Switzerland (because of a bin
Laden lawsuit), this first American edition links the events of September 11 to
pipeline politics, especially as practiced by the Bush administration. Although
these sorts of charges have been made in a general way, the authors have
collected a great deal of information, all footnoted.
Investigating for
three years, Brisard and Dusquie were able to follow the dots along a "parallel
diplomacy" in which the private negotiations of oil tycoons, religious
extremists, international financiers, and American politicians had little to do
with the U.S.' best interests.
The book is not particularly easy on the
Clinton administration; however, especially incriminating is the authors' claim
that FBI counterterror chief John O'Neil quit his job to become security head at
the Twin Towers, where he died, because of his frustrations with the Bush
administration's willingness to accommodate the Taliban (and bin Laden) for the
sake of the pipeline. Considering how complicated the material is, this book is
surprisingly easy to follow. It could wind up as the first 9/11 book for
conspiracy theorists or as the story behind the story. Maybe both. - Ilene
Cooper
The
Conscience of a Liberal: Reclaiming the Compassionate Agenda - Paul David
Wellstone - Hardcover: 256 pages.
Publishers Weekly: Minnesota Senator
Wellstone opens this memoir with his attendance at the funeral service of
archconservative Barry Goldwater. Wellstone was there because as a boy he had
read Goldwater's Conscience of a Conservative.
Paradoxically, he credits
his admiration for Goldwater's political integrity with providing the moral
basis for his own liberalism. And he is very liberal, indeed. After reading this
lucid and personal book, however, even those of opposite views would find it
hard not to admire him. Wellstone presents two propositions.
The first,
that integrity in politics is essential, will be widely applauded. The second,
that liberal political values reflect mainstream American values, will receive a
mixed reception. At the core of this account is Wellstone's desire to mobilize
voters to organize around issues he believes important to the country's
well-being. The litany of societal problems addressed is broad and includes
health care, education and testing, economic justice (welfare reform) and
campaign finance reform.
About each, Wellstone provides cogent and
thought-provoking facts, figures and expert opinions, as well as personal
stories that humanize the damage and loss of human potential he sees flowing
from current public policies. He also offers solutions consistent with his view
that government is capable of making a positive difference.
Grand
Theft 2000: Media Spectacle and a Stolen Election - Douglas Kellner -
Paperback: 256 pages.
Publishers Weekly: Kellner (Television
and the Crisis of Democracy) originally planned a chapter on the 2000
election in another book but expanded it in light of the postelection drama.
The result is somewhat formless and unfocused, with an improvisational
air as Kellner's shifting lens encompasses everything from direct reportage on
the television spectacle to brief reflections on corporate media agendas,
intriguing but neglected stories covered only in print or cyberspace, and
various theoretical considerations and speculations.
Kellner, a
professor of the philosophy of education at UCLA, develops a good number of
interesting ideas, arguments and stories only enough to whet readers' appetites.
These range from the squalid (understudied scandals of the Bush clan dating back
to Prescott's involvement financing Hitler) to the crucial (how Gore was tarred
as a liar for substantially truthful claims, while Bush's distortions were
repeated as gospel) to the abstract (how do conservative denunciations of
relativism and postmodern views of "truth" square with the Republicans'
relentless attack on the classic search for truth embodied in counting
votes?)
Our
Media, Not Theirs: The Democratic Struggle Against Corporate Media (Open
Media Series)
John Nichols, Robert Waterman McChesney, and Noam Chomsky -
Paperback: 140 pages.
Book Description: Much of the U.S. media is
consolidated in the hands of a few large companies, which results in journalism
biased toward the corporate point of view, this book contends. The authors argue
for local control, chronicle the rise of grassroots media activism, and conclude
with a proposal for meaningful improvement.
What
Liberal Media? The Truth About Bias and the News - Eric Alterman -
Hardcover: 322 pages.
Publishers Weekly: While the idea that a liberal
bias pervades the mainstream media has been around for years, it gained new
currency with the 2001 publication of Bernard Goldberg's Bias and its 2002
successor, Ann Coulter's Slander.
Alterman (Sound & Fury; Who Speaks
for America?; etc.) now seeks to debunk the notion and goes so far as to argue
that bastions of alleged liberalism like the Washington Post and ABC News "have
grown increasingly cowed by false complaints of liberal bias and hence,
progressively more sympathetic to the most outlandish conservative complaints."
He largely succeeds: whatever your politics, Alterman delivers
well-documented, well-argued research in compulsively readable form. His chapter
on business journalism, for instance, is a thrill-ride through the excesses of
late 1990s optimism and the subsequent crash in stock valuations and mood. But
he also counters that while the economy was peaking, major media outlets
virtually ignored traditional left-wing issues like labor rights, which had been
neglected, and income inequality, which was growing.
Spin
This! All the Ways We Don't Tell the Truth - Bill Press - Hardcover: 320
pages.
Book Description: We're all familiar with the warning, "Don't
believe everything you see or hear." Bill Press, the popular co-host of CNN's
Crossfire, will have you wondering whether you should believe anything at all.
Spin - intentional manipulation of the truth - is everywhere. It's in the
White House, in the courtrooms, in headlines and advertising slogans. Even
couples on dates - not to mention book jackets - are guilty of spin. Now,
analyst Bill Press freeze-frames the culture of spin to investigate what exactly
spin is, who does it and why, and its impact on American society as a whole.
Depending upon who is doing it, spinning can mean anything from
portraying a difficult situation in the best possible light to completely
disregarding the facts with the intent of averting embarrassment or scandal.
Using examples drawn from recent history - the Clinton presidency, the Florida
recount, and the Bush White House - Press first probes spin's favorite haunt:
politics.
In addition to surveying the incarnations of spin in the
fields of journalism, law, and advertising, Press also chews on the spin of sex
and "dating," a word that has become the very embodiment of spin. Perhaps
surprisingly, however, Press argues that spin isn't all bad, and that without it
the harsh truths of our times might be too tough to swallow.
The
Emerging Democratic Majority - John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira - Hardcover:
213 pages.
Publishers Weekly: In 1969 a prescient Kevin Phillips
published The Emerging Republican Majority, predicting the rise of the
conservative Republican movement. Now Judis, a senior editor at the New
Republic, and Teixeira, a fellow at the Century Foundation and author of The
Disappearing American Voter, argue that, if current demographic and political
trends continue, a new realignment of political power is inevitable, this time
sweeping Democrats to power.
In support of their thesis they argue that
the electorate is becoming increasingly diverse, with growing Asian, Hispanic
and African-American populations-all groups that tend to vote Democratic. On the
other hand, the number of white Americans, the voting population most likely to
favor Republicans, remains static. Further, according to the authors, America's
transition from an industrial to a postindustrial economy is also producing
voters who trend strongly Democratic.
Judis and Teixeira coin the word
"ideopolis" for the geographic areas where the postindustrial economy thrives.
They also argue that other changes, specifically the growing educated
professional class and the continuing "gender gap," will benefit Democrats,
whose political ideology is more consonant with the needs and beliefs of women
and professionals.
Judis and Teixeira predict that all these elements
will converge by 2008, at the latest, when a new Democratic majority will
emerge. Wisely, they warn that their predictions are just that, and that events
might overtake the trends. But their warning will bring little comfort to
Republicans, who will find their well-supported thesis disturbing. Copyright
2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Bush v.
Gore: The Court Cases and the Commentary - by E. J. Dionne (Editor), et
al
Paperback: 288 pages
Book Description: The Five Week Recount War
that followed the 2000 presidential election generated tumultuous debate in the
courts of justice as well as the court of public opinion.
This debate engaged fundamental issues of the democratic process, including
obligations of fairness and equality and the roles of elected bodies and the
courts in interpreting and vindicating the Constitution. Gathers landmark legal
cases from the Supreme Court of Florida and the U.S. Supreme Court along with
the best editorial commentary from prominent journalists and scholars on both
sides of the political divide.
Contributors include: George F. Will,
Scott Turow, Griffin Bell, Lani Guinier, Charles Krauthammer, Jesse L. Jackson
and John J. Sweeney, David Tell, Thomas L. Friedman, Michael McConnell, Hendrik
Hertzberg, Ramesh Ponnuru, Akhil Reed Amar, John Yoo, Linda Greenhouse, Nelson
Lund, Pamela S. Karlan and others.
Unequal
Protection: The Rise of Corporate
Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights
- Thom Hartmann - Hardcover: 320 pages.
Book Description: "Beneath the
success and rise of American enterprise is an untold history that is
antithetical to every value Americans hold dear. This is a seminal work, a
godsend really, a clear message to every citizen about the need to reform our
country, laws, and companies." - Paul Hawken, author of Natural Capitalism and
The Ecology of Commerce.
Unequal taxes, unequal accountability for
crime, unequal influence, unequal privacy, and unequal access to natural
resources and our commons - these inequalities and more are the effects of
corporations winning the rights of persons while simultaneously being given the
legal protections to avoid the responsibilities that come with these rights.
Hartmann tells the intriguing story of how it got this way - from the colonists'
rebellion against the commercial interests of the British elite to the distorted
application of the Fourteenth Amendment - and how to get back to a government
of, by, and for the people.
From Unequal Protection: "...over the past
two centuries, those playing the corporate game at the very highest levels seem
to have won a victory for themselves - a victory that is turning bitter in the
mouths of many of the six billion humans on planet Earth. It's even turning
bitter in unexpected ways for those who won it, as they find their own lives and
families touched by an increasingly toxic environment, fragile and top-heavy
economy, and hollow culture - all traceable back to the frenetic systems of big
business that resulted from the doctrine that corporations are persons."
A More
Perfect Union: Advancing New American Rights - Jesse L., Jr. Jackson, et al
- Hardcover: 420 pages.
From Publishers Weekly; After coauthoring the
recent Legal Lynching with his father (Forecasts, Aug. 13), Congressman
Jackson takes the lead in this book written with his press secretary, laying out
his moral and political vision.
The first, autobiographical section serves as an introduction to his
historical review of how race and states' rights have been intertwined both in
theory and practice. Jackson sees "race as the lens through which to see all of
American history," but economics and sectional politics are the substance.
From colonial times to the present, Jackson stresses both the
contradictions within Southern conservative ideology (such as Southern
states-righters' insistence on federal fugitive slave laws) and its
consistencies across time (small local government, low taxes, economic
underdevelopment and opposition to providing broad economic opportunities for
all), which have opposed progress toward a more perfect union, hitting blacks
the hardest, but hitting an even larger number of poor, working-class and even
middle-class whites.
The contrasting struggle for broadly shared
economic development, political power and personal freedom can best be advanced,
Jackson argues, by adopting eight new, benchmark-setting constitutional
amendments, guaranteeing rights primarily grounded in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, which the U.S. has ratified.
Each is treated in a separate chapter: the rights to quality health care,
housing, education, a clean environment, fair taxes, full employment, equality
for women and the right to vote. Though occasionally rough and repetitious, the
book's breadth, boldness and candor stirringly challenge conventional political
timidity.
UP FROM
CONSERVATISM - Michael Lind - Paperback: 304 pages.
Publishers
Weekly: Lind is perhaps the most prominent convert from 1980s neoconservatism.
Though his book only occasionally dips into his personal story, it is a powerful
attack on conservatives who, he says, use "the culture war, a revival of racism
and radical antigovernment rhetoric" to distract voters from the realities of
their own economic exploitation.
Lind's language is strong, and he has
much ammunition. The most damaging conservative hoax of recent years, he argues,
is supply-side economics, which led to our current deficit, "the central fact of
American politics today." He also critiques proposals for school vouchers, tax
policies that shift burdens to the middle class and proposals to cut welfare,
noting the much larger "Hidden Welfare State" of programs such as mortgage
subsidies.
It is too late to rescue American conservatism from the
radical right, he declares, pointing out the surprising sympathy conservatives
have for antigovernment hate groups. Lind doesn't dwell on attacking the left;
he did that in The Next American Nation. Given that few politicos today espouse
the "national liberalism" he propounds a centrist populism that unites moderate
social conservatism with economic class warfare. Lind urges his readers to
support neoliberals such as President Clinton.
Anatomy
of Greed: The Unshredded Truth from an Enron Insider - Brian Cruver -
Hardcover: 366 pages.
From Library Journal: Having received his MBA
degree in 1999, Cruver was hired by Enron in late March 2001 to be part of a
bankruptcy-trading group. Through Cruver, we see how a typical Enron employee
viewed the company's dramatic collapse. He talks about the initial concerns when
CEO Jeff Skilling resigned, worries of layoffs as new falsifications of
financial statements came to light, and the idle days of going to work after
most operations had ceased.
Although expressing resentment at the
millions made by top executives, he writes with a wry sense of humor. He tells
how, even after he was fired, Enron accidentally kept paying him for months. He
also recounts that when he was first hired, some employees jokingly referred to
Enron as the "Crooked E," supposedly because of its slanted-E logo.
The
book's title is deceptive in that the author was an insider only in the sense
that he worked for Enron. Except for one unidentified source, most of the book's
information about Enron's fraudulent accounting practices came from public
sources. Still, because Cruver's fast-paced book puts a human face on the many
employees hurt by the Enron and similar scandals, it is recommended for most
business collections. - Lawrence R. Maxted, Gannon Univ. Lib., Erie, PA
Wealth
and Democracy: A Political History of the American Rich - Kevin Phillips -
Hardcover: 432 pages.
Amazon.com review: Most American conservatives take
it as an article of faith that the less governmental involvement in affairs of
the market and pocketbook the better. The rich do not, whatever they might say -
for much of their wealth comes from the "power and preferment of government." So
writes Kevin Phillips, the accomplished historian and one-time Washington
insider, in this extraordinary survey of plutocracy, excess, and reform.
"Laissez-faire is a pretense," he argues; as the wealth of the rich has
grown, so has its control over government, making politics a hostage of money.
Examining cycles of economic growth and decline from the founding days of the
republic to the recent collapse of technology stocks, Phillips dispels notions
of trickle-down wealth creation, pricks holes in speculative bubbles, and
decries the ever-increasing "financialization" of the economy - all of which, he
argues, have served to reduce the well-being of ordinary Americans and
government alike.
Highly readable for all its charts and graphs,
Phillips's book offers a refreshing - and, of course, controversial - blend of
economic history and social criticism. His conclusions won't please all readers,
but just about everyone who comes to his pages will feel hackles rising. -
Gregory McNamee
The
Politics of Rich and Poor: Wealth and the American Electorate in the Reagan
Aftermath - Kevin Phillips - Paperback: 288 pages.
Publishers Weekly:
Blending economic analysis and historical comparisons, Phillips ( Mediacracy )
proposes that the legacy of Reagan's presidency includes an enormous
concentration of wealth at the top, intensifying pain and inequality for the
poor, a massive, mounting debt, and foreigners gobbling up large chunks of
America. The losers in this economic polarization include women, racial
minorities, young people, single-parent families.
Phillips demonstrates
that deregulation has especially hurt organized labor, poorer city
neighborhoods, people in small towns and rural areas. His analysis linking
Reaganism to America's global loss of economic power is compelling.
While George Bush keeps "imitating Ike in the 1990s" and refuses to
develop a national strategy, post-Reagan Democrats take the blame for failure to
resuscitate liberal economic populism. A stunning refutation of George Gilder's
Wealth and Poverty , Phillips's dispassionate report offers no solutions yet
zeroes in on key problems.
Manufacturing
Consent - Noam Chomsky and the Media - DVD - Noam Chomsky
Amazon.com
review: Peter Wintonick and Mark Achbar made this penetrating documentary about
the career and views of linguist and media critic Noam Chomsky. While the man is
the subject of the movie, the filmmakers wisely and carefully choose not to make
Chomsky more important than his insights into the way print and electronic
journalism tacitly and often willingly further the agendas of the powerful.
We learn a lot about Chomsky's formative experiences as a child,
student, academic, activist, and politician (he has campaigned for office), but
we learn just as much about the media institutions that deny him access today,
from ABC to PBS. The centerpiece of the film, arguably, is a long examination
into the history of the New York Times' coverage of Indonesia's atrocity-ridden
occupation of East Timor, reportage that (as Chomsky shows us) was absolutely in
lock step with the government's unwillingness to criticize an ally. --Tom Keogh
Also available on VHS
Tape.
The
Miami Herald Report: Democracy Held Hostage Martin Merzer, et al -
Hardcover: 352 pages.
Book Description: The Complete Investigation of the
2000 Presidential Election Including Results of the Independent Recount. The
Miami Herald presents an in-depth study of Florida's 2000 presidential election,
drawing on the independent vote review conducted by the accounting firm of
B.D.O. Seidman, and answering the question that millions of Americans are still
asking: If the Supreme Court hadn't halted the Florida recount, who would be the
43rd President?
Americans woke up on November 8, 2000 unsure who their
next president would be. A population accustomed to knowing the outcome of
electoral contests before the polls closed-and often much earlier than
that-would endure another thirty six days of high-stakes political and legal
maneuvering before the U.S. Supreme Court stopped recounts in the State of
Florida, effectively sealing the race for Texas Governor George W. Bush.
[In this book] The Miami Herald, which won a Pulitzer Prize for its
reporting on Miami's corrupt 1997 mayoral elections, delves into the deeply
flawed 2000 contest, revealing: That Florida election officials had known for
decades that the state's obsolete punch-card ballots constituted a serious
problem-yet 24 of the state's 67 counties still used them in 2000.
That
not only were the motives of some public officials-entrusted with the fair
outcome of the race-called into question, but also that Florida's Secretary of
State, Katherine Harris, revealed in an email obtained by The Herald that she
saw herself in Biblical terms as a defender of the unborn. That votes were
uncounted in disproportionate numbers in poor and minority voting districts-and
that many registered American voters were prevented from voting altogether....
Fools
for Scandal: How the Media Invented Whitewater Gene Lyons - Paperback: 224
pages.
From Library Journal: Lyons argues that Whitewater is basically a
hoax created and sustained by the media. He singles out the New York Times for
special attention and offers a detailed critique of its Whitewater coverage;
four major stories from the Times are included in the appendix.
The
partisan sources that journalists have relied on for their articles are
documented here. Lyons, now a columnist for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a
passionate and witty writer who has covered Whitewater for Harper's Magazine.
Although it is too early for the definitive Whitewater book, and recent
convictions and new unindicted co-conspirators test his argument, Lyons offers
details for those paying close attention to the case. Add to journalism
collections and to libraries where books on current events circulate well. -Judy
Solberg, George Washington Univ., Washington, D.C.
Arrogant
Capital: Washington, Wall Street, and the Frustration of American Politics -
Kevin Phillips - Paperback: 290 pages.
Publishers Weekly: Decrying the
influence of political and financial elites, veteran pundit Phillips ( The
Emerging Republican Majority ) here attempts to channel the dissatisfactions of
the general populace, as evinced on radio talk shows, into national reform.
"Capitals rot first," he declares, drawing briefly on such historical analogues
as Hapsburg Spain and 18th-century Holland to buttress his argument that the
current centers of American power, Washington and Wall Street, have sunk into
decadence.
Echoing recent critiques like Jonathan Rauch's Demo
sclerosis, he highlights a bipartisan support for the government status quo.
While Phillips wisely focuses on governmental, not social reform, his
generalization that conservatives blame cultural weakness while liberals
underscore economic decline ignores the influence of more nuanced thinkers like
Cornel West.
Among Phillips's better suggestions: move away from the two-party system by
allowing referenda and considering proportional representation; raise taxes on
the "really rich." Some problems, like the mercenary culture of lobbyists, may
be less amenable to remedy by policy than by moral suasion, but Phillips sets an
agenda for debate.
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