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The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion Paperback – January 13, 2009
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Rolling Stone’sMatt 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.
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateJanuary 13, 2009
- Dimensions5.19 x 0.7 x 7.99 inches
- ISBN-10038552062X
- ISBN-13978-0385520621
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Editorial Reviews
Review
THE GREAT DERANGEMENT
“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. I loved this book.”
—Michelle Goldberg, author of Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian Nationalism
“Matt Taibbi is the best American journalism has to offer. As The Great Derangement shows, he has absolutely no shred of fear in confronting the corruption that plagues our government and exploring the desperation that is rising in America. And somehow, he pulls it off while making us simultaneously weep in sorrow and laugh our asses off.”
—David Sirota, author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government—and How We Take It Back
“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
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
BORN AGAIN
It'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 just $17 million on positive ads. There were no longer any viable principles in play. Just hate. And distrust. The system had nothing left to offer the People, so the People were leaving the reservation. But where were they going?
That was what I'd come here to find out. While Washington was still basking in the glow of the Big Win and starting its revolting 2008 party way too early (headline on the Washington Post opinion page today: "An Iowan You Should Know," about candidate Tom Vilsack. I should know now? In December of 2006! Are these people insane?), I decided to pick a spot on the map, go there, and get retarded. If the country was going to flip out, I didn't want to be left behind.
***
The mute button was still on, but I gathered that the deskbound TV preacher was still blathering about Sudan. They kept alternating close-ups of his face with shots of balloon-headed Sudanese kids meekly waving the flies out of their eyes. I looked down at my notebook and saw my own handwriting jump back at me: PRAYER LINE (210) 490-5100.
I grabbed my cell phone and dialed the number. Three rings, then a recorded voice answered:
"Thank you for calling John Hagee Ministries. All of our prayer partners are currently busy. You may have called at a peak period. However, your call will be answered in the order it was received…"
I frowned and started doodling in my notebook. A year and a half ago I watched a British reporter at the Michael Jackson trial draw a picture of a knife plunging into a dog's head during the cross-examination of Larry King. Since then I can't stop drawing the same thing. I'm now beginning to wonder if the Brit caught the disease from someone else. Perhaps this goes back thousands of years. After a few minutes I heard a click and a young man's voice came on the line:
"Hello, John Hagee Ministries," he said.
"Yeah, hi," I said. "I'd like to make a prayer request."
"Sure," he said. "What are we praying for?"
I paused. When dealing with the kind of people who think Left Behind is really possible and who think Noah really was six hundred years old when the flood came, there is a strong temptation to ham it up, fuck with them a little, offer answers that will at least make them blink once or twice before they swallow them whole. I'll confess to doing this throughout my stay in Texas, and I don't feel a need to apologize for it—I live in this country, too, and sometimes I can't help being angry about how dumb and mean our culture has become, how fast that meanness and dumbness is expanding, and how determined some Jesus-culture merchants are that people like me should not escape it. And so from time to time that anger would come out, in a tall tale or two that would pop out of my mouth in churchgoing company. But hilariously, the joke would mostly end up cutting both ways. I'd say the craziest, stupidest stuff, trying like hell to get a rise out of people, and not only would I not get one, I'd for the most part be completely ignored—smiled and nodded at, and then just waved on through into my seat in the megachurch. Being a wiseass in a groupthink environment is like throwing an egg at a bulldozer.
That's the way things work in America. You can literally stick a fork into your own eye in public, and so long as your check clears, no one will even bat an eye. There was a lot of this sort of thing in my Texas experience, and it made for a strangely harmonious undertone to my relations with the locals: I kept sticking a fork in my own eye over and over again, and over and over again my new friends would smile like nothing was happening. You can say a lot of very weird shit when you're a Brother in Christ, so long as you don't forget to sing along at the right times.
In that regard, the "prayer request" I ended up making was for a fictional ex-wife who I said had run out on me. I told my prayer line counselor that my betrothed had thrown me over for a Jewish ACLU lawyer named Schatz—that she had jumped in his Saab and run away with him to Paris, to take the Bateau-Mouche ride she said I could never give her. I further told my counselor that I didn't know what "Bateau-Mouche" meant, but I knew it warn't Christian. When I was finished with my story, there was silence on the line for a moment.
"The car was a Saab?" the counselor said finally, with appropriate contempt.
I smiled, pleased that he was paying attention to the important details. I added that I didn't like this Schatz fellow at all. That the black curls in his hair looked almost like horns.
"Anyway," I said. "I just want to pray for her, pray that she finds her way back to me, back to Christ."
Product details
- Publisher : Random House; Revised ed. edition (January 13, 2009)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 038552062X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385520621
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.19 x 0.7 x 7.99 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,090,477 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #920 in Political Corruption & Misconduct
- #1,931 in Political Commentary & Opinion
- #5,055 in U.S. Political Science
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Matt Taibbi, author of the New York Times bestsellers The Divide, Griftopia, and The Great Derangement, is a contributing editor for Rolling Stone and winner of the 2007 National Magazine Award for Columns and Commentary.
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Customers find the book readable and interesting. They appreciate the author's insightful and unbiased perspective on various issues. The writing style is considered good and the author is described as gifted at turning phrases. Many readers laugh out loud and find the humor entertaining. Overall, customers describe the book as an informative yet frightening true story of war, politics, and religion.
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Customers enjoy the book's readability. They find it interesting, fun, and hard to put down. Readers also mention it's a quick read and brilliant work.
"...all in all a great read and i especially love the editing errors in the book. two that were glaring, but that gives it character...." Read more
"...The read is great, easy going and strangely eye opening, it certainly makes you think about your own experiences...." Read more
"...He's well-read, much more than Thompson ever was (HST could never quote Dostoevsky), and he can be much funnier...." Read more
"...Worth a read, but I'd suggest his "Spanking the Donkey" as much more satisfying and spot-on in its observations..." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and informative. They appreciate its unbiased and interesting take on any side of an argument. The book provides a good inside understanding of the inner workings of the American psyche. Readers find it provocative, fresh, and well-researched, with great themes and wit.
"...is that Taibbi actually presents his case, and his examples extremely well...." Read more
"...In this case, with just a few words, he tells a complete story. He provokes you to think and feel and ask questions...." Read more
"...That being said there are parts that are quite revealing and others just plain snarky fun...." Read more
"Matt takes you on an insightful journey of opposites...." Read more
Customers appreciate the author's writing style. They find it readable and engaging, with a gift for turning a phrase. The book conveys an element of reality and is described as a worthwhile read.
"...matt taibbi's writing style is brutally honest and i look forward to reading more of his work." Read more
"...And again it doesn't disappoint. It makes the book readable and conveys an element of this being "real"...." Read more
"...Maybe, but I won't get it with this book. Taibbi's writing is brilliant, of course, it might even exceed the political commentary of Hunter S...." Read more
"...Taibbi's strong writing and total immersion in his subject matter still manage to make this somewhat underwhelming thesis interesting, but in the..." Read more
Customers enjoy the humor in the book. They find it humorous and entertaining, with a consistent sense of laughter. The stories are written with irony, revealing flawed aspects of society.
"...investigative talent can be overlooked in this book by the string of stinging sarcasm, cynicism and hip-hop nihilism that run throughout the pages..." Read more
"...that go on in the U.S. Tabbi does all of this with his usual filthy, cynical, and hilarious style...." Read more
"...Zionist nut jobs and their pathetic flock is revealing and entertaining...." Read more
"...but Taibbi makes the information palatable by coating it in brilliant humor...." Read more
Customers like the journalistic quality of the book. They say Mat Tabbei is a great journalist.
"...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..." Read more
"...He's a wonderful reporter and sits comfortably outside the media world, and thus is able to give a very unbiased and interesting take on any side of..." Read more
"I like Mat Tabbei. Great Journalist. I am still working on the book" Read more
Customers find the book scary. They describe it as a true story about war, politics, and religion.
"This book is both funny and scary. It gives a personal review of encounters with everyday Americans. People..." Read more
"Terrifying yet comforting..." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2010matt taibbi's tracking of a legislative bill procured by the notorious joe barton was a great exorcise into what's wrong with our legislative process. it's a prime example of "disaster capitalism" at work. on the heels of the katrina disaster, corporate oil "i'd like to apologize to bp" texas politician barton pushes thru deregulation of "the clean air act" cloaked in "an emergency bill" to summarize, the bill has nothing to do with it's intended "emergency" and literally helps unaffected polluters dodge regulation. taibbi goes on to show how most legislation is done behind closed doors and catches dems doing the same kind of shell game.
by far the most comical section is taibbi's infiltration of the 'cornerstone church', in san antonio. "the longest three days of my life", chapter 3, is a hilarious over the top romp into religion therapy that includes confessions, speaking in tongues, and motivational speakers. phillip fortenberry, if that's his name, is one of the most legendary figures you would ever want to meet. most memorable is the bus ride and taibbi's confession that his father, an alcoholic circus clown would beat him with his over sized shoes. the people in his group were so self-involved he barely got a reaction. but it doesn't take long for taibbi to worry about his own sanity and soon becomes more than anxious to escape this bizarro world.
more adventures ensue including a short stint in iraq, and an almost fist fight with an over zealous "truther".
all in all a great read and i especially love the editing errors in the book. two that were glaring, but that gives it character. matt taibbi's writing style is brutally honest and i look forward to reading more of his work.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2011I enjoy reading about US politics, because it reflects more or less what is happening in Australia. Sure the topics are different and mostly I'm comparing summaries or biased opinion pieces (from the US) with everyday mundane stuff that (sadly) feels like it doesn't involve me (from Australia). And that is exactly what this book is about.
Well, not about US vs America, but rather how there is no real choice in terms of who you vote for because at the end of the day they people "in power" are funded by the people in power, and those fund either party just about the same. Or to put it another way, the government is, if not for sale, for rent. The other part of this book is about how we respond to this, or conversely how we interpret one of these to be the lesser or greater evil. What's interesting is that Taibbi actually presents his case, and his examples extremely well.
While reading this, I came across the term "gonzo journalism" which wikipedia's definition means is the style of this book. I had read Griftopia: A Story of Bankers, Politicians, and the Most Audacious Power Grab in American History before and rather liked it, and its style had appealed to me (though again, this is not a scholarly work), which had put me onto this book. And again it doesn't disappoint. It makes the book readable and conveys an element of this being "real".
Something that I thought was also interesting is that at the start of the book Taibbi mentions that he was down about where is career and style had lead him, though after this book I think he should feel rather proud.
So about the book, it ends in about 2007 with the paperback edition having a extra epilogue written in 2008. This is before the Tea Parties and Barack Obama winning the election, and really it steers away from the Republican or Democrat parties in all but he most base or stereo typical values, which is why it remains so accessible and applicable even in Australia. The primary topics dealt with are about religion (fundamentalist Christian) and the 9/11 truth movement, all in view of how they relate to politics and vice versa. In the process Taibbi goes to church and discusses with truthers and chronicles the experience in light of its effect on him but also in light of the other individuals.
The read is great, easy going and strangely eye opening, it certainly makes you think about your own experiences. For such a short book, and written in the style it is, it is surprising how broad the topics covered are and how well they are examined.
Clearly the book is a little dated, though I don't think this should be seen as a current affairs issue of a certain year, but rather as a global issue to be understood, possibly in light of the political climate at the time of writing, though as he argues, not much is really changing, except maybe it is getting worse. Irrespective, it is a great read and possess excellent depth.
Top reviews from other countries
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KylwaldaReviewed in Germany on March 23, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Njet!
ich bewerte keine Bücher mehr. Nachdem ich zahllose Rezensionen hier auf Amazon gelesen habe, weiß ich, dass sie alle so subjektiv sind, dass sie nicht als objektive Bewertung taugen. Lest und bildet Euch Eure Meinung selbst!
Ian MooreReviewed in Canada on December 22, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Nice quality and sturdy.
I need it . Nice quality and sturdy. Good quality with low price. It is very fast delivery. It's awesome, Works great and has a sturdy cord.
One person found this helpfulReport
Anglian TravellerReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 29, 20124.0 out of 5 stars Derangement to the left, derangement to the right...Taibbi's insightful essay has 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 favours. 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 humour 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 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.
One person found this helpfulReport
Brian GriffithReviewed in Canada on August 3, 20083.0 out of 5 stars Rolling Stone reporter spies on America's disffected idiots
Taibbi commendably takes his journalist spotlight off the corrupt actors on Washington's center stage, and instead investigates the most disaffected ordinary Americans. But to do so he goes undercover, posing as a believer in far right-wing Christian-Zionism, or far-left 9/11 conspiracy theories. He basically plays Borat, inventing oddball past experiences to play his part, and letting the unsuspecting locals make fools of themselves for the camera. Later Taibbi gives his real opinions of what idiots they are, and asks what America is coming to.
Only slowly does Taibbi's basic compassion for these people rise to the fore. These are people, he reasons, both conservatives and liberals, who feel so conned by the political rip-off system that they can't tell who to trust. And maybe, Taibbi suspects, part of the con has been to get them to blame and hate each other.
--author of Correcting Jesus
Stephanie D. NorrisReviewed in Canada on July 5, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Amazing book!


