Rating: Not rated
Tags: Politics
Summary
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.