The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion at the Twilight of the American Empire
The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion at the Twilight of the American Empire book cover

The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion at the Twilight of the American Empire

Hardcover – May 6, 2008

Price
$14.81
Format
Hardcover
Pages
288
Publisher
Spiegel & Grau
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385520348
Dimensions
6.5 x 1.5 x 10.25 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly With his trademark mordant wit, journalist Taibbi explores the black comedy of the American polis, where a citizenry shunted out of the political process seeks solace in conspiratorial weirdness and Internet-fueled mysticism. Trained from birth to be excellent consumers, Americans have become experts in mixing and matching news items to fit [their] own self-created identities, according to the author, who embeds himself in these pockets of people as he travels to the Congress press gallery, Iraq, meetings of the 9/11 Truth Movement, and goes undercover at a Christian Retreat. He pillories born-again Christians and the 9/11 conspiracy theorists, concluding that despite their differences: Both groups were and are defined primarily by an unshakeable belief in the inhumanity of their enemies on the other side; the Christians seldom distinguished between Islamic terrorism and, say, Al Gore–style environmentalism, while the Truthers easily believed that reporters for the Washington Post , the president and the frontline operators of NORAD were equally capable of murdering masses of ordinary New York financial sector employees. Thoughtful Democrats, Republicans and independents will find common ground in this book that punctures pretense, hypocrisy and know-nothingness. (May 6) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. PRAISE FOR THE GREAT DERANGEMENT "Matt Taibbi is the best American journalism has to offer. As The Great Derangement shows,xa0he has absolutely no fear in confronting the corruption that plagues our government and exploring rising desperation that plagues America. Andxa0somehow, he pulls it off while making us simultaneously weep in sorrow and laugh our asses off." –David Sirota, author of Hostile Takeover “ The Great Derangement is a scabrous, hilarious vivisection of our disintegrating nation. An unstinting reporter and sensational writer, Taibbi shines a light on the corruption, absurdities and idiot pieties of modern American politics. Beneath his cynical fury, though, are flashes of surprising compassion for the adrift, credulous souls who are taken in by it all.xa0 I loved this book." –Michelle Goldberg, New York Times bestselling author of Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian Nationalism “Where other mainstream news sources fail, Matt Taibbi madly embraces his role as an honest political observer/writer/citizen in a democracy. I would also like to take this opportunity to ask for Matt’s hand in marriage”. –Janeane Garofalo “With his trademark mordant wit, Taibbi explores the ‘black comedy’ of the American polis. . .thoughtful Democrats, Republicans, and independents will find common ground in this book that punctures pretense, hypocrisy, and know-nothingness.” — Publisher’s Weekly “Taibbi is a powerful writer, and his righteous fury with the sickening mechanism of congressional corruption seethes on every page.” –Kirkus Reviews “It's a fascinating and hilarious study, fueled by Taibbi's own brand of paranoia, reflecting a cruel light on an America gone wild.” – Los Angeles Times “A vicious, funny, heartbreaking tour of the American scene.” – The New York Observer “Acidly funny… For readers who have themselves grown desperate, Taibbi’s renegade book is a bracing kind of salvation–the kind that will amuse and enrage at the same time.” – Time Out “Vibrant, rich and irreverent.xa0 It's quotable, pointed, painful, funny and true. Thank God we have Matt Taibbi around.” –Daily Kos MATT TAIBBI is a roving national reporter for Rolling Stone and a columnist for rollingstone.com. He's the author of Spanking the Donkey, a collection of his writings about the 2004 election. He lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. ONEBORN AGAINIt's a Thursday afternoon in San Antonio and I'm in a rented room—creaky floorboards, peeling wallpaper, month to month, no lease, space heater only, the ultimate temporary lifestyle—and I can't find the right channel on the television. I rented this place, it seems, without making sure that it had ESPN. This realization throws the poverty of the room into relief for the first time.Shit, it's cold in here, I think, aware of a draft all of a sudden. When I look back at the TV, it's on a gospel channel. A video preacher straight out of central casting is pointing a finger right at the screen—right at me—admonishing me to surrender to God. He's got swept-back white hair, gold wire-rimmed glasses, and a booming hellfire voice that makes the name "A-BRA-HAAM!" come spilling out of his mouth like a brand-new Mustang V-8 turning over for the first time."When you give up more than you deserve," he shouts, "God will give you more than you dreamed!" He pauses, letting the words settle in for effect. "I want you to write that down somewhere!"I shrug and reach for a notebook."Write it down: When you give up more than you deserve," the preacher repeats, "God will give you more than you dreamed!"I nod and write it down in block letters. Why not? I have no idea what the hell it means, but I didn't come to Texas to argue with people. But what exactly do I deserve?The preacher continues on; his sermon is from Genesis 12, the story about Abraham coming to Egypt and instructing his beautiful wife, Sarah, to say that she's his sister, which in turn allows Abraham not only to avoid being killed but to trade her to Pharaoh in exchange for a mother lode of slaves, asses, and camels. But, as things like this always do in the Old Testament, this unlawful union brings a plague on Pharaoh, and when Pharaoh finds out the reason, he is pissed, screaming to Abraham, "Why saidst thou, 'She is my sister?'…Therefore behold thy wife, take her, and go thy way."At which point Abraham and his people leave, and a few chapters later he gets to go into the tent of his wife's handmaiden Hagar and make a baby with her. This seems like a great deal for Abraham—avoid execution, get a great trade-in deal for your wife, then bang her handmaiden—but I'm not sure I see where the lesson about deserving and dreaming is here. No such problem for Pastor John Hagee."You see, it happened to A-BRA-HAAM, it can happen to you!" he shouts. "Nothing is impossible to those who have faith!"Down at the bottom of the screen there's a notation. "PRAYER LINE: (210) 490-5100." I write that down, too, marking it with a smiley face.The show ends shortly after that and another, less talented preacher—his Carrot Top-esque shtick is preaching seated at a desk—comes on and starts babbling about the Christian children in the Sudan being kidnapped at birth and forced to convert to Islam. Here in South Texas everyone for five hundred miles in every direction is a Christian, but they're constantly finding ways to think of themselves as a besieged minority. You hear a lot about our oppressed brothers and sisters in Africa, India, the Middle East. They're ideal objects of sympathy because they're helpless, they're poor, and it would take them at least twenty years to reach San Antonio even if they started swimming today.Anyway, I hit the mute button, lean back in my chair, look around at my shitty room, and sigh.***It's December 2006 and I'm now on hiatus, after spending the whole fall covering the midterm elections for my depraved liberal magazine, Rolling Stone . I'm here in Texas to work out the answer to a question that has been germinating in my mind for some time, and which came to a head after the elections.Back in the East Coast media world where I come from—an ugly place where nothing grows but scum, lichens, and Jonathan Franzen—the sweeping electoral victory by the Democrats was greeted with a tremendous sigh of relief, as if it were a sign that our endlessly self-correcting, essentially centrist American polity had finally come to its senses. In that world, there was optimism because the people had finally derailed that nutty Bush revolution, because the country had apparently seen the light about a pointlessly bloody and outrageously expensive war in Iraq, and because the cautious yuppieism of the Democratic Party had been triumphantly rehabilitated, at least temporarily quelling the potentially internationally embarrassing specter of terminal one-party rule. The pendulum was swinging back, yin was morphing back into yang. American politics moved in cycles, and the latest conservative cycle had finally ended.The election results were being sold, in other words, as a triumph of the American system, of American democracy. Just like the producers for Monday Night Football , the counry's political elite likes things best when the teams are evenly matched. As far as the press was concerned, the best thing about the Democratic bounce-back in the midterms was that it set up a great 2008. Even odds, or maybe Dems -1, to reach the White House. American politics had never been in better shape.I knew better. I had been all around the country in the last year and I knew that the last thing these elections represented was a vote of confidence in the American system. Out There, in states both blue and red, the People were boarding the mothership, preparing to leave this planet for good. The media had long ignored the implications of polls that showed that half the country believed in angels and the inerrancy of the Bible, or of the fact that the Left Behind series of books had sold in the tens of millions. But on the ground the political consequences of magical thinking were becoming clearer. The religious right increasingly saw satanic influences and signs of the upcoming apocalypse. Meanwhile, on the left, a different sort of fantasy was gaining traction, as an increasing number--up to a third of the country according to some poll—saw the "Bush crime family" in league with Al-Qaeda, masterminding 9/11. Media outlets largely ignored poll results that they felt could not possibly be true--like a CBS News survey that showed that only 16 percent believed that the Bush administration was telling the truth about 9/11, with 53 percent believing the government was "hiding something" and another 28 percent believing that it was "mostly lying." Then there was a stunning Zogby poll taken just in advance of the 2004 Republican convention that showed that nearly half of New York City residents—49.3 percent—believed that the government knew in advance that the 9/11 attacks were coming and purposely failed to act.Not only did voters distrust the government's words and actions; by 2007 they also had very serious doubts about their government's legitimacy. Successive election cycles foundering on voting-machine scandals had left both sides deeply suspicious of election results. A poll in Florida taken in 2004 suggested that some 25 percent of voters worried that their votes were not being counted—a 20 percent jump from the pre-2000 numbers. More damningly, a Zogby poll conducted in 2006 showed that only 45 percent of Americans were "very confident" that George Bush won the 2004 election "fair and square."The most surprising thing about that last poll was the degree to which the distrust was spread wide across the demographic spectrum. That 71 percent of African Americans distrusted the 2004 results was perhaps not a surprise, given that black voters in America have been victims of organized disenfranchisement throughout this country's history.But 28 percent of NASCAR fans? Twenty-five percent of born-again Christians? Thirty-two percent of currently serving members of the armed forces? These are astonishing numbers for a country that even in its lowest times—after Watergate, say, or during Reconstruction—never doubted the legitimacy of their leaders to such a degree.And if distrust of the government was at an all-time high, that was still nothing compared to what the public thought of the national media. Both the left and the right had developed parallel theories about the co-opting of the corporate press, imagining it to be controlled by powerful unseen enemies, and increasingly turned to grassroots Internet sources for news and information. In the BBC/Reuters/Media Center's annual Trust in the Media survey in 2006, the United States was one of just two countries surveyed—Britain being the other—where respondents trusted their government (67 percent) more than they trusted national news reporters (59 percent). A Harris poll that same year showed that some 68 percent of Americans now felt that the news media were "too powerful."The country, in other words, was losing its shit. Our national politics was doomed because voters were no longer debating one another using a commonly accepted set of facts. There was no commonly accepted set of facts, except in the imagination of a hopelessly daft political and media elite that had long ago lost touch with the general public. What we had instead was a nation of reality shoppers, all shutting the blinds on the loathsome old common landscape to tinker with their own self-tailored and in some cases highly paranoid recipes for salvation and/or revolution. They voted in huge numbers, but they were voting out of loathing, against enemies and against the system in general, not really for anybody. The elections had basically become a forum for organizing the hatreds of the population.And the worst thing was that the political parties at some level were complicit in this and understood what was going on perfectly—which is why together they spent $160 million on negative advertising in this cycle, as opposed to... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A REVELATORY AND DARKLY COMIC ADVENTURE THROUGH A NATION ON THE VERGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN—FROM THE HALLS OF CONGRESS TO THE BASES OF BAGHDAD TO THE APOCALYPTIC CHURCHES OF THE HEARTLAND
  • Rolling Stone
  • ’s
  • Matt Taibbi set out to describe the nature of George Bush’s America in the post-9/11 era and ended up vomiting demons in an evangelical church in Texas, riding the streets of Baghdad in an American convoy to nowhere, searching for phantom fighter jets in Congress, and falling into the rabbit hole of the 9/11 Truth Movement.Matt discovered in his travels across the country that the resilient blue state/red state narrative of American politics had become irrelevant. A large and growing chunk of the American population was so turned off—or radicalized—by electoral chicanery, a spineless news media, and the increasingly blatant lies from our leaders (“they hate us for our freedom”) that they abandoned the political mainstream altogether. They joined what he calls The Great Derangement.Taibbi tells the story of this new American madness by inserting himself into four defining American subcultures:
  • The Military
  • , where he finds himself mired in the grotesque black comedy of the American occupation of Iraq;
  • The System
  • , where he follows the money-slicked path of legislation in Congress;
  • The Resistance
  • , where he doubles as chief public antagonist and undercover member of the passionately bonkers 9/11 Truth Movement; and
  • The Church
  • , where he infiltrates a politically influential apocalyptic mega-ministry in Texas and enters the lives of its desperate congregants. Together these four interwoven adventures paint a portrait of a nation dangerously out of touch with reality and desperately searching for answers in all the wrong places.Funny, smart, and a little bit heartbreaking,
  • The Great Derangement
  • is an audaciously reported, sobering, and illuminating portrait of America at the end of the Bush era.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(81)
★★★★
25%
(68)
★★★
15%
(41)
★★
7%
(19)
23%
(62)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I was prepared to really enjoy this book...

...but it suffered from sloppy editing (typos, grammatical and style errors) and also because the whole project never really has a finished sense of what it wants to be: reporting, gonzo-lite, a series of intertwined essays or a long magazine article. The changes in tone can be jarring and the cross cutting between the three stories Taibbi is telling would need a defter hand to fully create the effect he was looking for. This project is also fighting the incredibly short shelf life of political stories in a political season (For instance, he hints that the Ron Paul campaign could be carrying the new paradigm of "post-partisan" politics) A lot of these stars have obviously risen and fallen in the pause between composition and publishing.
That being said there are parts that are quite revealing and others just plain snarky fun. Just because his reach exceeds his grasp in this case is no reason not to read and enjoy his observations and the conclusions he ultimately implies.
8 people found this helpful
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Not his best, but Taibbi is always enjoyable

Matt Taibbi is in my opinion the most interesting political writer working today. He is a writer's writer, clearly in love with the language (in a very approachable way, don't worry) and quite gifted at turning a phrase. I regularly find myself stopping and rereading paragraphs in his books that seem to perfectly capture the essence of what makes American politics so annoying, yet fascinating. I frankly expected him to be more left-leaning, but he is refreshingly equal-opportunity in his skewering.

All that said, I found the central premise of "The Great Derangement" to be a little flimsy. Basically, religious nut-jobs (as supposed examples of the extreme Right) and 9/11 conspiracy nut-jobs (as supposed examples of the extreme Left) are...wait for it...both equally nutty. Taibbi's strong writing and total immersion in his subject matter still manage to make this somewhat underwhelming thesis interesting, but in the end it felt like he was trying too hard to wrap it all up in a neat theme rather than just letting the writing do its work.

Worth a read, but I'd suggest his "Spanking the Donkey" as much more satisfying and spot-on in its observations (if you skip some of the silly fantasy sequences).
6 people found this helpful
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excellent

Great book written by a powerful writer. It is no wonder it hit the NY Times top ten as soon as it hit the shelves.
Rick O.
5 people found this helpful
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Food for Thought

Matt Tabbi's book The Great Derangement was a fascinating read. Under a false identity, Tabbi spent time with Matthew Hagee's Cornerstone Church, slowly going through the indocrination process. He also spent some time with a 9/11 conspiracy group, who believe the US government is responsible, directly or indirectly, for the attacks. He also intersperses chapters on governmental procedures and happenings between his church and conspiracy saga. There's a also a brief chapter describing his embedment with a unit in Iraq.

His premise is basically that in our society, many people have chosen to kind of check out and embrace some of these out there kind of organizations or any kind of group or feedback that supports their own point of view. The stories he tells of the people he meets in these organizations are at the same time sad, frustrating, funny, and uplifting. At times, Tabbi seems to be mocking the people involved, but then he'll find himself sympathizing with them as well. I like the fact that he doesn't come off as perfect in the book himself, or like a detached anthropologist studying people as if they were scientific specimens. The fact that he seems like a jerk sometimes underscores how all of us feel somewhat alienated from each other in this modern society.

The chapters on governmental procedure, namely his description of how unrelated items get added to bills really was eye-opening and more than a little frightening. To see that there really isn't much of a difference between the parties, other than their lobbyist loyalties was somewhat discouraging as well.

Highly recommended if you're looking for something to think about.
5 people found this helpful
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Good Points Under All the Rants

I first read Matt Taibbi's piece about Hagee's megachurch in the Rolling Stone magazine. I decided that I HAD to pick up his book ASAP.

The parts about the fundamentalist, World-Is-Ending-Tomorrow churches were well-written, insightful, and hilarious but sad at the same time.
The parts about the 9/11 Truth movement shed light on what could happen when a confused, ill-informed public is left to scramble for "facts" and make up theories to explain their disappointments in the American system.

I GOT that and I completely agree.

However--BE WARNED

Taibbi slips in and out of rants about political leaders, the rich and the kinds of vacations he imagines they take, sports, and other very random--and very BORING--topics.

I agree that he needed to show how the failing political system in America is contributing to people's sense of fear, ignorance, worry, regret, and shame--how its leading them to act "crazy"

but in his effort to show this he gets utterly boring and occasionally sways off topic

Saying that--he did A LOT of undercover field work in these megachurches and truther meetings--and I wish he would have reported more on THAT.

In the end, though, this book helped me put certain issues into perspective. But I'd just wait until more used copies come up and get it at a discount.
4 people found this helpful
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Derangement to the left, derangement to the right...Taibbi's insightful essay leads to disturbing conclusions

I confess to being something of a fan of Matt Taibbbi's writing. In his blogs, his pieces for `Rolling Stone' Magazine (of which he is now editor) and his numerous TV appearances he never fails to entertain as he reveals some of the truly astounding levels of corruption in the badly dysfunctional process of US Government, and the way moneyed lobbyists buy legislators with campaign donations in order to gain special favors. Taibbi's public stance against the criminal practices on Wall Street which almost bankrupted the world's economy, and his open support for the `Occupy Wall Street' protestors, has revealed an understanding of the complexities of the banking scandal way beyond the knowledge-level of most `economics journalists' in the mainstream media. All this is done with clear, lucid explanations and a biting humor to sweeten the medicine.

`The Great Derangement' is Taibbi's 2007 book describing how the corruption of the American political process on Capitol Hill has now degenerated to the point where many citizens simply don't understand what is going on or how the system really works, because big business lobby groups and the congressmen and senators who work to forward their interests bury the process of getting what they want in procedural complexity largely hidden from public scrutiny. As a reaction to this sham, large sections of American society have become so disconnected from the political process that they retreat into either fundamentalist end-times religious movements led by far-right political cheerleaders, or ignorant delusional conspiracy theories about the government either knowing about or organizing a vast conspiracy behind the 'planes operation' - the Salafi-Islamist attacks on NYC & Washington DC in September 2001. Taibbi reveals these differing flavours of mass idiocy to be essentially the same phenomenon; a useful distraction which serves the interests of the prevailing administration and their various paymasters, in the case of the `truthers' by leading them away pied-piper style into delusional paradigms where they waste their energies and have no effect on the political process, and in the case of the end-times evangelical churches by - among other things - delivering a powerful political lobby for the neo-con right wing and indirectly for the hard-line policies of the State of Israel.

Through detailed examinations into the daily business of government, Taibbi patiently and forensically dissects the manipulative and dishonest practices at the heart of the legislative process. By way of illustration, Taibbi focuses on bill HR 3893 championed by Congressman Joe Barton (R-TX). For public consumption, the bill is supposed to champion the rights of the consumer and make available cheaper gasoline and heating oil to the cash-strapped and destitute survivors of Hurricane Katrina. In reality, we are shown with great skill and in great detail how the more arcane procedures of Congress are exploited to repeal provisions of the Clean Air Act and so relieve polluters from annoying legislation which curbs toxic emissions. The price of gas remains unaffected by the new law and oil-company profits continue to roll in: political cynicism in action. In a later chapter, Taibbi illustrates how the congressional budget is constructed to ensure political paymasters from industry are rewarded by the complex process of `earmarking' which, if you have little knowledge of these arcane procedures, may come as an unwelcome revelation as to the degree of corruption in the broken political system.

The saddest (and funniest) chapters are those where Taibbi adopts the undercover persona `Matt Collins' and joins the Cornerstone Evangelical Church in Texas to discover for himself how such institutions operate. Chapter 3 `The Longest Three Days of my Life' details an `Encounter Weekend' at the Church which becomes progressively laugh-out-loud funny as Matt is slowly taken over by his alter-ego and gets swept along by a process organized with military precision, a textbook example of how to generate `group-think.' However, Matt also feels empathy for other attendees who befriend him; we sympathise with their plight as they try to fill the void of their broken lives with new religion which offers them family-belonging, certainty and salvation. Largely abandoned by the political class, a new `family' is embraced with religious zeal and belief that `the rapture' will take them to Heaven. The casting-out-of-demons ceremony ("I cast out the demon of the intellect...I cast out the demon of anal fissures...I cast out the demon of astrology...of philosophy") is beyond comic absurdity - especially to the 21st century sensibilities of a European reader.

Chapter 4 `The Derangement at War' sees the author in Iraq, where he goes out on patrol with a US Army platoon in Bagdhad. The pointlessness and financial profligacy of US policy in Iraq is brought into sharp focus, as the well-meaning but ineffectual young recruits go about their duties but are in reality no more than Aunt-Sally targets for insurgents. Says Taibbi:

"Sometime later, when I'd find myself in Texas with ex-military preacher Phil Fortenberry - talking about enemy aircraft and arterial breaches with somewhat older men and women, many of them ex-soldiers moved on to a different but no less confusing stage of life - I wondered if the Army, with its same tireless belief in American can-doism and its same sit-in-a-circle get-to-know-you rituals, doesn't prepare some of these kids for future encounter weekends" (p97).

Two chapters of the book deal with Taibbi's encounters with 9/11 `truthers' and `the derangement of the American left.' Initially a small bunch of `truthers' picket his NYC office in protest at a comment about their `movement' in a blog (Taibbi called them "clinically insane"), and subsequently deluge his email inbox with obscenities and hate-mail. Later, Taibbi attends some `troofer' meetings incognito, and we see here the same kind of dysfunctional, delusional disconnect with any kind of meaningful reality as earlier revealed in the Cornerstone Church meetings. If you have ever been exposed to the deranged rantings of a 9/11 conspiracy theorist, these chapters are well worth the price of admission:

"The movement is distinguished by a kind of defiant unfamiliarity with the actual character of America's ruling class. In 9/11 truth lore, the people who staff the White House, the security agencies, the Pentagon, and groups like PNAC and the Council on Foreign Relations are imagined to be a monolithic, united class of dastardly, swashbuckling risk-takers with permanent hard-ons for `Bourne Supremacy'-style `false flag' operations, instead of the mundanely greedy, risk-averse, backstabbing, lawn-tending, half clever suburban golfers they are in real life...

"The truly sad thing about the 9/11 Truth Movement is that it's based on the wildly erroneous proposition that our leaders would ever be frightened enough of public opinion to feel the need to pull off this kind of stunt before acting in a place like Afghanistan of Iraq. At its heart, 9/11 Truth is a conceit, a narcissistic pipe dream for a dingbat, sheeplike population that is pleased to imagine itself dangerous and ungovernable...the adherents flatter themselves with fantasies about a ruling class obsessed with keeping the terrible truth from the watchful, exacting eye of the people...whereas the real conspiracy of power in America is right out in the open and always has been, only nobody cares..." (p189-191) - and so on.

For all the merits of `The Great Derangement' - and there are many - one can't help but feel Taibbi might have given us an even better book; a punchier, more coherent essay about the current state of the political landscape in the USA. Editing is good but not exemplary, there are no illustrations or photos, and the argument is made in episodic cameos from pulling together loosely connected strands. These minor shortcomings might simply be down to the author's journalistic credentials as editor/author of magazine articles; book-writing is a slightly different skill-set.

Matt Taibbi is still young. Let's hope he continues to fight the good fight, and offer us more of his intelligent, scathing, right-on-the-money insights in the future.
3 people found this helpful
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Just a Great Read

This book had me rolling with laughter and crying like a baby! What Taibbi exposes in a wild and hysterical way is the idiocy of the general public. The stuff about Hagee's "church" is frightening and funny. C'mon, throwing up the "demon of anal fissures"! How is that not funny!? That people can be so easily fooled and led like sheep is scary. And the 9/11 truthers - just go need to go away. What Taibbi exposes about how Congress really works is just plain sad. This country is in it deep and we may never recover. Buy this book and get a dose of reality! Awesome!
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Funny and Frightening at the same time

I read this book, and was continually laughing out lid at the absurdity of the sort of crap that is normal every day in America. However, I found myself nearly depressed at the end though, because while the author makes fun of these sort of mouthbreathing morons, the more I look around, the more I see. I guess it would be a lot funnier if there weren't so many of these idiots out there, and that they weren't in charge of stuff.
3 people found this helpful
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In the Great Hunter Thompson Tradition

It's interesting: Most of the negative reviews here are eerily similar to the poison-pen critiques once leveled at Taibbi's Rolling Stone predecessor, the late Hunter S. Thompson. Taibbi is a worthy successor to Thompson; his freewheeling style conveys the same stream-of-consciousness spirit. Like Thompson, controversy suits him, which means readers either love or hate him; and like HST, I suspect he doesn't give a damn whether he is widely loved or not.

He has that same uncanny ability to sort through all the BS and get to the heart of the matter -- and then explain it to us in plain (sometimes profane) English. For example, nobody has written better, or more clearly, about the Wall Street/banking bubble, its causes and its consequences. Disagree with his conclusions all you want; the facts bear him out. In many ways, though, Taibbi is a better writer than Thompson; as another reviewer mentioned, he's very good at capturing the regional paranoia of Texas and similar intellectual enclaves as few (if any) have before him. He's well-read, much more than Thompson ever was (HST could never quote Dostoevsky), and he can be much funnier.

Whether you subscribe to his progressive political bent or not is irrelevant. It is good to see that there are still good journalist/writers like Thompson (and HL Mencken and Dorothy Parker before him) who have the ability to capture the spirit and zeitgeist of their time, and to write the truth as they see it, without worrying about who they might offend. Read this book -- with a healthy grain of salt, as if you were reading one of HST's "Fear and Loathing" books -- and learn something about where we are, and where, in all likelihood, we are headed.
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The Great Revelation

Taibbi writes with flair and gusto, and bound to make you laugh. If you don't laugh, check your pulse. A truly shocking - and absorbing - romp through some seedier parts of US culture. Would have benefitted from more historical, philosophical or psychological insight and evaluation. Still, bloody good fun.
2 people found this helpful