Ebook American Dynasty
Locate numerous publication categories in this web site. As one of one of the most seen website, we always offer the most effective point. Among them is American Dynasty This is just one of the most referred publications from us to provide for you. The reading publication will certainly be constantly the inspiring book not just for individuals that over this topic but likewise others. To know how exactly this book will reveal you could adhere to more details below.

American Dynasty
Ebook American Dynasty
Challenging the mind to believe much better and also faster can be gone through by some means. Experiencing, listening to the other experience, adventuring, examining, training, and extra practical activities may assist you to boost. But right here, if you do not have enough time to obtain the thing straight, you could take a really easy way. Reviewing is the most convenient task that can be done all over you want.
This publication American Dynasty deals you much better of life that could develop the quality of the life brighter. This American Dynasty is what the people currently require. You are here and also you may be precise as well as sure to obtain this publication American Dynasty Never ever question to obtain it also this is just a publication. You can get this book American Dynasty as one of your collections. But, not the collection to show in your shelfs. This is a precious book to be checking out compilation.
From the title, we will likewise reveal you the topic pertaining to explain. When you actually require this sort of resource, why do not you take it now? This book will certainly not only provide you the knowledge and lesson about the topic, from the words that are used, it define new enjoyable thing. This American Dynasty will make you feel no fear to spend even more time in reading.
ah, also you do not obtain the very best perfections from reading this publication; at least you have actually improved your life and performance. It is really should make your life much better. This is why, why do not you aim to get this publication and review it to fulfil your spare time? Are you curious? Juts choice now this American Dynasty in the download link that we provide. Don't wait for more moment, the possibility now as well as reserved your time to choose this. You could really utilize the soft data of this publication correctly.
Amazon.com Review
Paraphrasing a passage from Machiavelli's The Prince, Kevin Phillips writes, "a ruler can ignore the mob and devote himself to the interests of the ruling class, gulling the inert majority who constitute the ruled." He then says, "Borgia references aside, 21st-century American readers of The Prince may feel that they have stumbled on a thinly disguised Bush White House political memo." These pointed words would sting regardless of who uttered them, but coming from Phillips, a former Republican strategist, they have an added piquancy. In American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush, Phillips traces the rise of the Bush family from investment banking elites to political power brokers, using their Ivy League network, vast wealth, and questionable political maneuvering to obtain the White House and consequently, shake the foundation of constitutional American democracy. Citing the Bush family mainstays of finance, energy (oil), the military industrial complex, and national security and intelligence (the CIA), Phillips uses copious examples to show the dangerous alliance between the Bushes' business interests (huge corporations such as Enron and Haliburton) and the formation of national policy. No other family, Phillips says, that has fulfilled its presidential aspirations has been so involved in the ascendancy of the arms industry and of the 21st-century American imperium--often at the expense of regional and world peace and for their personal gain. It is hard to tell what offends Phillips the most: the Bushes' systematic deceit and secrecy, their shady business dealings, their cronyism, or their family philosophy that privileges the very wealthy and utterly dismisses all the rest. It is clearly all of these things combined. But at the top of Phillips' list is the dynastic nature of their family power, for it is that concentration of power and influence that strikes at the heart of our democracy. Past administrations have transgressed, albeit not so egregiously, and other political families have had dynastic ambitions. But none have succeeded as thoroughly as the Bushes. Jefferson and Madison would be horrified, and according to Phillips, we should be too. --Silvana Tropea
Read more
From Publishers Weekly
Political and economics commentator Phillips (The Politics of Rich and Poor, etc.) believes we are facing an ominous time: "As 2004 began, [a] Machiavellian moment was at hand. U.S. president George W. Bush... was a dynast whose family heritage included secrecy and calculated deception." Phillips perceives a dangerous, counterdemocratic trend toward dynasties in American politic-she cites the growing number of sons and wives of senators elected to the Senate as an example. Perhaps less convincingly, he compares the "restoration" of the Bushes to the White House after an absence of eight years to the royal restorations of the Stuarts in England in 1660 and the Bourbons in France in 1814. To underscore the dangers of inherited wealth and power, Phillips delineates a complex case involving a network of moneyed influence going back generations, as well as the Bushes' long-time canny involvement in oil and foreign policy (read: CIA) and, he says, bald-faced appeasement of the nativist/fundamentalist wing that, according to Phillips, is now "dangerously" dominating the GOP. Casting a critical eye at the entire Bush clan serves the useful function of consolidating a wealth of information, especially about forebears George Herbert Walker and Prescott Bush. Phillips's own status as a former Republican (now turned independent) boosts the force of his argument substantially. Not all readers will share Phillips's alarmist response to the Bush "dynasty," but his book offers an important historical context in which to understand the rise of George W.Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Read more
See all Editorial Reviews
Product details
Hardcover: 397 pages
Publisher: Viking Adult; 1st edition (2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0670032646
ISBN-13: 978-0670032648
Product Dimensions:
6.4 x 1.3 x 9.3 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
3.8 out of 5 stars
137 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#1,090,376 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
I keep thinking that each book I read is the best I've ever read, but Kevin Phillips' span of knowledge is incredible.A blurb on the cover indicates the book is "devastating", and it certainly is.Although much of the bad stuff writes about the four generations of Bushes is conjecture, even if one tenth or what he claims is true, it's still "devastating".It was particularly hard to read all of the bad stuff about the Bush presidents' family because I have always been an anti-socialist, and have voted for a Bush president for four times.On the other hand, this book was published in 2004, when George W. was still president. Now we'll never have to vote for a Bush again, so perhaps this book should be seen as an explanation as to how DEMOCRATS view the Republicans.Kevin Phillips was a political advisor to President Nixon. He was once a "Republican", but now considers himself an Independent.I money, greed, racism, a yen for a global empire, oil dominance and fundamentalist Christianity are the measures of a political party, then I don't want it either!In 2016 we'll just have to nominate someone that all Americans can admire.
I bought this book because I have always enjoyed hearing what Kevin Phillips had to say when he provided political analysis on NPR and other places. Also, the idea of exploring a "dynasty" developed by the Bush family was intriguing. I was not disappointed.Kevin Phillips has done a great deal of meticulous research which he has used to make his case. His "case" is that over several generations, members of the Bush family have developed numerous business ties with German industrialists, Arab Sheiks, and the like. At the same time, family members also sought to hold public office in Congress. Their political activities helped bolster the success of their businesses. And, of course, the family has also produced two presidents, with another possible candidate (Jeb Bush) still out there considering if he will make a run for the top job.I found the book easy to read and understand even though Phillips was presenting material of great complexity. I was amazed to read the back-story of people like George H. W. Bush and his father, Prescott Bush. There was a large difference between this back-story and the public persona that George H. W. Bush, for instance, presented to the public. (I mention him because I witnessed the rise of his career in government service, but I have no memory of Prescott Bush's political career.) Phillips backs his contentions with solid research. He presents a troubling picture of how this family built its power machine over generations. He is objective; he does not adhere to the Republican Party line, but presents the story as he has found it through his research.
"In the councils of government we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist" President Eisenhower 17 Jan 1961.Philips places this text on the fronticepiece of the book and argues that, in fact, the Bush dynasty embraces and cultivates this 'unwarrented influence' and argues that today we see around us the dramatic problems brought about by the 'disastrous rise of misplaced power.'He works hard to describe 'Dubya's' links with Enron and Ken Lay and how these links helped propel Enron to paper-profit heights. He points to how the free-wheeling energy trading frontier in which Enron was the world's greatest gunslinger was manipulated by the company and it was this manipulation that caused the infamous rolling blackouts in California. This event marked Enron's apex. Bush did what he could to sustain the company as it fell. This support, it appears, sustained it just long enough so that the paper trail describing the crimes and assigning culpability could be expunged. It's a clear and gloomy picture, but Phillips is, I believe, more successful in dealing with Haliburton.Halliburton deserves special treatment for many reasons. Back when it was known as Brown and Root it owned Johnson. Then, when Cheney was defense chairman under GHW Bush, he started lobbying for rules that would create private millitary contractors. Today the business holds something in excess of $300 billion contracts with the Pentagon and Halliburton and Booze Allen together hold 2700 of 3000 contracts. One of those is a priceless and unlimited cost contract to provide logistical support for ten years.Eisenhower's wprry about undue influence of companies whose profits were made by preparing the country for war arose from Nye commission report establishing this as a leading cause of World War I. If having companies make profits out of making prudent preparations for war is the grave problem Eisenhower warned us about, how much more so is having profits and executive compensations tied on the scale and cost of executing wars? Exedutive stock option values would tied directly to how many dead American bodies lie on foreign soil. Think about it. Now, imagine a Chairman of a Company holding vast amounts of stock and options in such a company elevated to the level of US President. or Vice President He would stand to make a vast fortune by arranging lingering large scale oversees wars. Sound familiar? (( The effect of this scheme on Presidential incentive would be exactly the same as if we compensated the President $100,000 for each American soldier killed in combat. And each time the Whitehouse reveals the identity of a spy associated with someone whose work opposes the continuity of the war, pay the President $1,000,000. The proposed scheme, at least, would boast a transparency that the current scheme does not.))Do as Karl Rove proudly claims to do and read Machiavelli's The Prince every year. Do so to understand the true religion of the Bush team. And you will get it.The book is organized into three parts I Dynasty, II Crony Capitalism, III Oil and Armageddon (my titles) In part one he traces the Bush and Walker families military, industrial, and political affairs. I was not completely convinced that the Bush family constituted a dynasty. Or that this in and of itself was bad. Either way, Philips does argue against the legitimacy of the regime, wryly noting that the 5-4 decision that put Bush in power in 2000 contrary to the will of the people as represented either by the popular vote or by what ought to have been electoral college votes - had Florida's electoral college votes been consistent with the way people actually voted - contained "most surprising language ... indicating that in the American democracy, the public had no constitutional right to participate in electing a president." This would be news to a lot of people.The second part is infinitely better. Here, I think, Phillips does a solid job of establishing that we are now living through Eisenhower's nighmares. (my take) It is here that the Halliburton and Enron cases are fleshed out.In the third part we learn of GHW's negotiating role in the October Surprise which handed Reagan the election over Carter. We learn that the mantra "We do not negotiate with terrorists" that we heard through the years Bush shared the White House with Reagan came with an unstated footnote - 'except in the case where we gain some political advantage by doing so.' See also the October surprise and the Iran-Contra affair.Reagan years marked the rise of Christian fundamentalism in the US. And since then much of the rest of the world has seen similar disturbing trends. It is unclear whether Phillips believes the Whitehouse believes it is fighting some holy war in the mideast or whether it is just cynically encouraging Christian fundamentalists to view it as such to serve his own purposes. To the Bush regime is the Iraq war about oil or Armageddon? Phillips does not answer the question but he does raise it.The reading level of this book is higher than that of many I've read recently. The syntax was sometimes difficult. And sometimes the ideas were dense. Not a problem. I can read slowly enough to get it. But there were many, many times when I thought the continuity between sentences and between paragraphs simply did not work. The thematic instead of chronological organization led to gaps and repetition. And there were but a miniscule number of times in the book I could have guessed which chapter I was reading from without referring to the chapter heading.For all its organizational and structural difficulties, Phillips is a master of turning a good phrase. He recognizes good quotations and he makes good use of them. Here are a couple gems:Speaking of America's religious exaltation of market forces that sprang up in the 1980's: "Market theology can be almost childlike in its ignorance of subjects like the Koran, suicide bombers, and Carpathian ethnology."Why I find comparing America to a third world nation under Bush is such a tempting thing to do "Texan civic culture, more akin to that of Mexico, Venezuela, or Brazil, has accepted wealth and its benefits with minimal distraction by either guilt or noblesse oblige."Speaking of Harken energy, a company of which GW was a director before he traded his shares in tor an interest in the Texas Rangers: "Harken was described in the Texas Observer as having 'direct links to institutions involved in drug smuggling, foreign currency manipulation, and the CIA's well documented role in destabilization of the Australian government.'"Speaking of the Bush penchant for saying one thing and doing something totally different " If hypocracy is the tribute vice pays to virtue, compassionate conservatism is the policy hypocracy uses to disguise economic vice."Speaking of the unfunded mandate 'No child left behind' and the gaping chasm between Bush rhetoric on education and practice.. "Meanwhile, state-level plans to rein in education spending were especially notable in the two Bush political bailiwicks. In Texas, a 2003 funding crisis pushed the state share of school funding to a fify year low, forcing major cutbacks. In Florida, which likewise ranked near the bottom in per capita education spending, graduation rates, and SAT scores, Governor Jeb Bush was working to thward an expensive school class-size reduction mandate passed by voters in 2002."And just so we do not forget : "Zapata [Petroleum, GHW Bush's oil services company] provided commercial supplies for Dulles' most notorious operation, the Bay of Pigs invasion."(( This is a 'so-what' bit until linked up with the revelation that GHW's address was found in de Mohrenshildt's address book. This sent me to the web. There I found several sources claiming Maurice Bishop was an undercover moniker for David Atlee Philips, the CIA operative who contracted GHW's Zapata Petroleum [above]. Another source claimed Maurice Bishop was the guy who posed as a Marxist revolutionary in the Grenada invasion incident. If these assertions are true then the Grenada incident during the Reagan/Bush second term might well have been nothing but an act of theater arranged between Atlee Philips and Bush. A staged war to help Bush win the presidency. Perhaps Iraq for GHW was just a bigger act. When dynasties stage wars for reasons completely disconnected with or contrary to national interest, they deserve to fall evermore from power.}There are times when its language seems impenetrable, its arguments indirect, and its organization desultory, making the book a difficult read. But for the patient, it offers up a pretty damning case against perpetuating the Bush Dynasty.
American Dynasty PDF
American Dynasty EPub
American Dynasty Doc
American Dynasty iBooks
American Dynasty rtf
American Dynasty Mobipocket
American Dynasty Kindle

0 komentar:
Posting Komentar