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Cargando... Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Rightpor Jane Mayer
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Everyone who cares about American politics should read this book. It's a hard slog, not because of any lapses on the author's part, but because the story itself is full of twists and turns and deliberate obfuscations (shell organizations that are only a PO box, etc). If you want to understand how Charles and David Koch, two unelected billionaire brothers, motivate, steer, and fund the radical right, attempting at every turn to buy politicians and votes and elections, this is your book. A shameful, dark chapter in our democracy, which, unfortunately is not only not over, but is instead in full, hideous flower. Congratulations to Jane Mayer--I don't know how she stood it. "Urgent" and "compelling" are two words critics love to use. Most books to which these adjectives are applied are neither; Jane Mayer, happily, has written a book here which is both. If you are interested in understanding how our democratic institutions have been subverted, and how our legislative branch has become larded with incompetent, ignorant, and highly ideological obstructionists, this book will serve you well. Very highly recommended. What a scathing description of the forces behind the near collapse of democracy we have witnessed in the United States. Even if the author has a liberal agenda, and even if only half of this book is unbiassedly reported, the situation is truly frightening. Worse still, it’s hard to envision a path out of this mess. Jane Mayer’s Dark Money is the ultimate in nightmare investigation of the Koch Brothers. They have their tentacles in all aspects of the planet. The way they have manipulated our way of life is scary real. It’s all here. The rise of the tea party, citizens united, obstruction of Obama, and reversing/eliminating any climate change rules. The best thing about the book is Jane’s writing clarity and refusing to sound academic and preachy. Hopefully this will be a wakeup call to an end of the wealthy 1% running the United States. And that dark money tactics of the ultra- rich Koch brothers comes to an end. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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"Igual que en Me?xico, en Estados Unidos se compran elecciones ... E?sta es la historia de co?mo los hombres ma?s poderosos del mundo lograron encumbrar a Donald Trump, a la mala. En esta poderosa investigacio?n, la galardonada periodista Jane Mayer documenta co?mo los multimillonarios estadounidenses lucharon --y consiguieron-- aduen?arse del sistema electoral de la nacio?n ma?s influyente del mundo. No conformes con disfrutar de uno de los tratos ma?s privilegiados en el planeta, los potentados secuestraron la democracia de aquel pai?s para sus propios fines, con una sofisticacio?n inaudita y altamente efectiva. Este gran reportaje --y en este an?o-- reviste especial relevancia para Me?xico, donde los empresarios y los poli?ticos suelen imitar lo que hacen y perpetran sus homo?logos de Estados Unidos."--Page 4 of cover No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Still, that doesn’t answer Mayer’s most serious charge, that the Koch brothers and their billionaires club have built a third national political party (a third column?) using the Republican Party as its stalking horse, much like the early Greeks used the Trojan Horse to defeat the walls of Troy.
By extension: have they used their cadres to effect a coup d’état in the 2016 election of Donald Trump?
This is a much more difficult question to answer.
Clearly, Donald Trump was not their favourite and yet Paul Manafort managed to convince Trump to adopt Mike Pence as his running mate. Pence is as close as anyone to the Koch brothers.
Trump could be forced out of office any day, or so soiled by his business dealings that he’ll resign rather than see himself or his children indicted for serious federal and state crimes.
This would leave Pence and by extension, Charles and David Koch in the catbird seat.
Mayer gives us plenty of background to figure out what would happen next:
- to satisfy the Christian Fundamentalist wing, eradication of the divide between church and state
- to satisfy the industrialists, complete eradication of environmental controls on big business
- to satisfy the energy hawks, drilling in the Arctic, more fracking, more pipelines through indigenous peoples’ lands
- serious reduction in government services, very likely including prosecution of white collar crime, more resources for incarceration and particularly outsourced incarceration
- the distribution of weapons in the schools
- a serious decline in social entitlement programs, and very likely wider differences between the rich and the poor
Would this lead to a counter-revolution? A Bernie Sanders’ led counter revolution?
I wouldn’t rule it out.
Funny thing is that I kinda agree with some of the tenants of the Ultra Right in the US.
For example, I do think that government could be smaller. In Canada, we have 10 provincial governments that do the work one government could do more cheaply. In the US, you have 50 states that basically do the same thing and replicate each other’s laws.
Pfft. Automation could eradicate these useless obsolete governments.
Even municipal governments, for that matter, duplicate each other.
I’m usually loath to reduce the role of local government because its the only level of government that most people understand. The Kochs and their buddies hate federal government mainly because it:
A) Makes them pay taxes
B) Regulates their use of the commons
C) Tries to make them treat blacks and other peoples fairly
D) Assumes, fairly in my opinion, that failures in the marketplace will not redistribute income to all the owners of the commons
It’s pretty hard to sympathize with these rich people. Especially when they subvert the purpose of non-for-profit organizations toward political ends.
They don’t seem to have a problem with state governments, at least governments they can control. Nor do they have a problem spending unsustainable amounts for worldwide military domination.
My point is if under these circumstances the ability to vote does not produce democracy, or any incremental freedoms, why not just flush them down the toilet, then make rules to ensure majority rules?
Do we need 17 people on the ballot? ( )