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The Backlash: Right-Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters, and Paranoid Politics in the Age of Obama Kindle Edition

4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 35 ratings

In The Backlash, Liberal columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning political reporter Will Bunch goes behind the scenes of America’s new extreme right-wing minority to explore how their campaign of misinformation, their distortion of President Obama, and their collective fear of the future combine to pose a very real threat to our democratic system. From health care reform to immigration policies, The Backlash is a gripping investigation into the emerging voice of the dangerous American right wing.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

While it was no secret that Americans on the far right of the political spectrum were unenthusiastic about Obama's victory, the immediacy and intensity of the backlash went well beyond what anyone expected. In this exhaustive investigation of the Tea Party movement and its loudest mouthpieces, Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin, Bunch seeks to help liberal and moderate America understand the rage of the right, where they see the nation headed, and how legitimate grievances are being manipulated by opportunists hawking fear to make millions off of working class people. While Bunch's own biases are apparent from page one, he is careful to try to present the far right in an honest light and, according to Bunch, without challenging their perspectives. Maturity in political discourse would be refreshing if Bunch were writing political discourse; he's not. This is investigative reporting. Bunch's primary issue seems to be Beck's opportunism, but his targeting of the only person he doesn't interview will likely make conservatives avoid his book, something Bunch clearly expects. But for liberals or moderates seeking to understand current far right events, the book will fascinate, and likely frighten.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Already fretting over the U.S. Census Bureau prediction that by 2050 whites will no longer be in the majority in the U.S. and worried by the loss of jobs and home equity, a certain element of the white population has been unhinged by the election of the nation’s first black president, argues Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Bunch. Thus, the Tea Party, Birthers, Oath Keepers, the 9.12 Project, and other right-wing radicals are on the rise, spurred by television and Internet hustlers, most prominently Glenn Beck. Bunch traveled the circuit from Delaware to Arizona, attending anti-immigration meetings and shooting rallies, to record the astonishing anger, fear, and discontent that has formed into a backlash against President Obama, alleging that he is not a U.S. citizen, that he means to take away guns from private citizens, and that he is directing FEMA to set up internment camps, all of which Bunch debunks. Bunch also profiles the cynical hustlers making money on this visceral fear, comparing Beck to Elmer Gantry as he morphs from evoker of the Founding Fathers and defender of the Constitution to evoker of God the father and defender of Christian morality, all the while hawking gold and survival food packets through Glen Beck, Inc. Despite writing in a sometimes awkward second-person voice, Bunch has rendered an insightful close-up look at the individuals and social forces that promise to churn American politics in the face of huge social and demographic changes. --Vanessa Bush

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B003VIWNH6
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins e-books; Reprint edition (August 31, 2010)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 31, 2010
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3187 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 372 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars 35 ratings

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Will Bunch
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Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
35 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the subject matter important, fascinating, and intrepid. They also say the author manages to identify several key events that served as catalysts for the movement. Opinions are mixed on readability, with some finding it entertaining and engaging, while others say it's not worth reading and a complete waste of time.

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3 customers mention "Content"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the subject matter important and fascinating. They appreciate that the author manages to identify several key events that served as catalysts for the movement. Readers also mention the book is an intrepid piece of investigative journalism and analysis about the right-wing movement.

""The Backlash" by Will Bunch is an intrepid piece of investigative journalism and analysis about the right wing political backlash to the election..." Read more

"...people alternately depressing and boring, but I think the subject matter is important and I'm grateful for the author's research...." Read more

"...The author manages to identify several key events which served as catalysts for this movement...." Read more

3 customers mention "Readability"2 positive1 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the readability of the book. Some mention it's highly enjoyable and engaging, while others say it's not worth reading and a complete waste of time.

"...Bunch manages to make these people likable and engaging -- without giving an inch on the glaring factual inaccuracies of their attacks...." Read more

"...Not worth reading. The book would be a complete waste of time, but I did learn just how much an author will embellish a story in attempts to add..." Read more

"...if the subject matter isn't for you, the author makes the book highly enjoyable and entertaining to read. All and all, awesome!" Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2011
"All that has happened is that the public has adjusted to incoherence and been amused into indifference" (Neil Postman, 1985). While that applies readily to
society, today, it merely scratches the surface of the cultural cataclism that
we have inflicted on ourselves, a collision of world views that formerly moved
about in relative harmony before the Information Age knocked them out of orbit
and into one another, a virtual chain reaction that threatens to atomize every
ideal we associate with democracy.

Contrasting with advanced sophistication in communication technology, there is little substance in transmission. Dropped into an empty oil drum, a lead pellet masquerades as a cannon ball. Bubble-headed bombast is taken as brilliance. Differences, innocent, ordinary and old as dirt, are portrayed as posing a greater threat to national well-being than the latest strain of flu bug. "They're not like us."

The bizarre thing about all this is that we have known since the establishment
of the nation how remarkably diverse we are. Indeed, there was a time, not so
long ago, in relative terms, that we considered that a source of strength, not
of weakness. We celebrated it as the core of national history, "From the one, many; from the many, one."

Reporting on an extensive search for meaning in the madness, Will Bunch offers valuable insight into the minds and hearts of people disturbed by changes they
see as the result of a deliberate and concerted effort to destroy their way of life. It does not appear to have occurred to them that, sometimes, regardless
of who sits in the White House, or the backhouse, "stuff happens." It happens
on TV. Actors discuss the nuances of plots, taking a leak on camera. Nothing
is sacred in la la land.

"Socialized medicine!" HMOs denied access to doctors and procedures for years before anyone bellowed about "death panels." Granted, there are myriad things
that go on out of sight, beyond our control. And that, the author posits, may
be what the fuss is all about, the sense that we have no real say in the things that affect us, promoting distrust of authority, and otherwise feeding a phobia
of almost everything.

Think this to be unprecedented? The rancor and wrangling that plagued the Constitutional Convention of 1787 pales in comparison with the hoohah over ratification that followed, covered superbly by Pauline Maier in her hefty
book on the subject. While some readers have attempted to draw a parallel
between the mood in the country then and today, what is clear, whenever we
come together to discuss something, Americans display an incredible degree
of discordance, seeking a path toward mutual understanding. Face to face,
we see eye to eye, though rarely, as through a glass, but darkly. And the
lens bears all the colors of the rainbow.

What is not clear, as Bunch muses, is what the U.S. Constitution has to do
with the present unrest, in reality. As testament to the media that pumps
life into it, there is substantial evidence that public protest has become immoderately marketable, funneling millions into the coffers of latter-day
broadcast Barnums.

Beyond the benighted ballyhoo, Bunch reports, lies genuine unease over the
uncertainty of modern life. So much change, and so fast. Or so it seems.
Every generation has stretched to embrace unexpected challenges. However,
for a portion of the population, it is as though the fabric of society has
reached its limit--the elastic has given out. It's not easy being a small
town in a small world in an expanding universe.

Small towns have been bypassed by shifting economies for generations. The
one this writer grew up in has changed enormously, the principal employer,
a prominent manufacturer, having moved operations overseas, over time, and
with the usual impact on local trade. Buffeted in the backwash, castaways
rail at the Ship of State, ineffectual at reeling in corporate greed, plus
the unabated concentration of wealth at the top one-percent that offers no
relief for cash-strapped states, counties, cities and towns. Big business
operates on the principle of profit, not philanthropy. Who sells stock in
highways, bridges and other essential infrastructure? None of which seems
to matter to the people who argue that government is the problem, as Bunch discovers.

If the past, however pictured, beckons to the populist imagination, it may
be because the present is a blur.

Thankfully, the author manages to bring it more fully into focus, with the
caveat that much remains to be told. Perhaps, an expanded view may return
the nation to the time-honored agreement to disagree, assuming that we can
agree on what the disagreement is about.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2010
"The Backlash" by Will Bunch is an intrepid piece of investigative journalism and analysis about the right wing political backlash to the election of the nation's first African-American president. Mr. Bunch ingeniously ingratiates himself with a number of right wing organizations in order to gain insight and report his observations about the movement to us. Written with compassion and intelligence, Mr. Bunch's book alerts us to the challenge of achieving consensus and civility in a rapidly changing America.

Mr. Bunch suggests that an underlying source of right-wing political rage is the reality of working class economic insecurity. Many of the activists with whom Mr. Bunch interacts are aging or retired Baby Boomers who have been dealt the cruel fate of joblessness and economic adversity. Eschewing politics for most of their lives, many are easy marks for organizations such as the 9-12 Project, Oath Keepers and the Tea Party who generally offer easy answers to complicated questions. More troubling, others seem to be motivated by nothing less than sheer racial prejudice towards those who they believe are to blame for their troubles, such as immigrants and minorities.

No doubt this underground investigation sorely tested Mr. Bunch's patience, if not his sanity. To his credit, Mr. Bunch faithfully records the frequently misinformed if not paranoid views of the hapless, uneducated masses. Fortunately for us, Mr. Bunch kept his cool so that he could amass plenty of material for his book; and then evened the score with his pen. Throughout the book, Mr. Bunch is quick to refute the lunatic conspiracy theories and misinformation that seems commonplace among right wingers about Obama's birth certificate, United Nations troops on U.S. soil, gun confiscation rumors, and so on. In this sense, Mr. Bunch's book is practically a work of cultural anthropology that minutely describes its subject while critiquing its peculiar worldview.

Therein lies the value of Mr. Bunch's book. It seems that America's failure to provide decent primary education, health care and meaningful employment is producing a growing mob of disaffected, alienated people whose inarticulate anger represents a threat to society as we know it. Mr. Bunch writes that even as the far right's opposition to health care reform succeeded in forcing compromise legislation that is more of a boon for the insurance industry than social progress, the movement is increasingly flirting with quasi-religious charlatans such as Glenn Beck (see also Common Nonsense: Glenn Beck and the Triumph of Ignorance) who promise their followers a kind of messianic deliverance from what is believed to be the deprivations of the liberal state. In this manner, the movement is at once exploited by those seeking to make a quick buck; while it is also being prepared for a kind of counterrevolution with unpredictable consequences.

I highly recommend this book to everyone.
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