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Griftopia: A Story of Bankers, Politicians, and the Most Audacious Power Grab in American History Kindle Edition
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A brilliantly illuminating and darkly comic tale of the ongoing financial and political crisis in America.
The financial crisis that exploded in 2008 isn’t past but prologue. The grifter class—made up of the largest players in the financial industry and the politicians who do their bidding—has been growing in power, and the crisis was only one terrifying manifestation of how they’ve hijacked America’s political and economic life.
Matt Taibbi has combined deep sources, trailblazing reportage, and provocative analysis to create the most lucid, emotionally galvanizing account yet written of this ongoing American crisis. He offers fresh reporting on the backroom deals of the bailout; tells the story of Goldman Sachs, the “vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity”; and uncovers the hidden commodities bubble that transferred billions of dollars to Wall Street while creating food shortages around the world.
This is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the labyrinthine inner workings of this country, and the profound consequences for us all.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateNovember 2, 2010
- File size2046 KB
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“A relentlessly disturbing, penetrating exploration of the root causes of the trauma that upended economic security in millions of American homes . . . a full-scale indictment of Wall Street and Washington.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Matt Taibbi is [Hunter S.] Thompson’s heir. . . . [Griftopia] is the most lucid, justifiably angry description of what happened and what continues to happen to our nation’s economy.”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Taibbi chronicles the corruption of the political process with indignation and dark humor. The takeaway? Be angry, but blame the right culprits.”—Time
From the Trade Paperback edition.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Grifter Archipelago;
or, Why the Tea Party
Doesn't Matter
"Mr Chairman, delegates, and fellow citizens ."
The roar of the crowd is deafening Arms flailing spastically as the crowd pushes and shoves in violent excitement, I manage to scribble in my notebook: Place going absolutely apeshit?
It's September 3, 2008 I'm at the Xcel Center in St Paul, Minnesota, listening to the acceptance speech by the new Republican vice- presidential nominee, Sarah Palin The speech is the emotional climax of the entire 2008 presidential campaign, a campaign marked by bouts of rage and incoherent tribalism on both sides of the aisle After eighteen long months covering this dreary business, the whole campaign appears in my mind's eye as one long, protracted scratch-fight over Internet-fueled nonsense.
Like most reporters, I've had to expend all the energy I have just keeping track of who compared whom to Bob Dole, whose minister got caught griping about America on tape, who sent a picture of whom in African ceremonial garb to Matt Drudge and because of this I've made it all the way to this historic Palin speech tonight not having the faintest idea that within two weeks from this evening, the American economy will implode in the worst financial disaster since the Great Depression.
Like most Americans, I don't know a damn thing about high finance The rumblings of financial doom have been sounding for months now-the first half of 2008 had already seen the death of Bear Stearns, one of America's top five investment banks, and a second, Lehman Brothers, had lost 73 percent of its value in the first six months of the year and was less than two weeks away from a bankruptcy that would trigger the worldwide crisis Within the same two-week time frame, a third top- five investment bank, Merrill Lynch, would sink to the bottom alongside Lehman Brothers thanks to a hole blown in its side by years of reckless gambling debts; Merrill would be swallowed up in a shady state-aided backroom shotgun wedding to Bank of America that would never become anything like a major issue in this presidential race The root cause of all of these disasters was the unraveling of a massive Ponzi scheme centered around the American real estate market, a huge bubble of investment fraud that floated the American economy for the better part of a decade Take it as a powerful indictment of American journalism that I'm far from alone in this among the campaign press corps charged with covering the 2008 election None of us understands this shit We're all way too busy watching to make sure X candidate keeps his hand over his heart during the Pledge of Allegiance, and Y candidate goes to church as often as he says he does, and so on.
Just looking at Palin up on the podium doesn't impress me She looks like a chief flight attendant on a Piedmont flight from Winston-Salem to Cleveland, with only the bag of almonds and the polyester kerchief missing from the picture With the Junior Anti-Sex League rimless glasses and a half updo with a Bumpit she comes across like she's wearing a cheap Halloween getup McCain's vice-presidential search party bought in a bag at Walgreens after midnight-?four-piece costume, Pissed-Off White Suburban Female, $19.99 plus tax.
Just going by the crude sportswriter-think that can get any campaign journalist through a whole presidential race from start to finish if he feels like winging it, my initial conclusion here is that John McCain is desperate and he's taking one last heave at the end zone by serving up this overmatched electoral gimmick in a ploy for . . . what? Women? Extra-horny older married men? Frequent Piedmont fliers?
I'm not sure what the endgame is here, but just going by the
McCain campaign's hilariously maladroit strategic performance so far, it can't be very sophisticated So I figure I'll catch a little of this cookie-cutter political stump act, snatch a few quotes for my magazine piece, then boogie to the exits and grab a cheesesteak on the way back to the hotel But will my car still be there when I get out? That's where my head is at, as Sarah Palin begins her speech.
Then I start listening.
She starts off reading her credentials She's got the kid and nephew in uniform-check Troop of milk-fed patriotic kiddies with Hallmark Channel names (a Bristol, a Willow, and a Piper, a rare Martin Mull-
caliber whiteness trifecta)-check Mute macho husband on a snow machine- check This is all standard-issue campaign decoration so far, but then she starts in with this thing about Harry Truman:
My parents are here tonight, and I am so proud to be the daughter of Chuck and Sally Heath Long ago, a young farmer and haberdasher from Missouri followed an unlikely path to the vice presidency.
A writer observed: "We grow good people in our small towns, with honesty, sincerity, and dignity." I know just the kind of people that writer had in mind when he praised Harry Truman.
I grew up with those people.
They are the ones who do some of the hardest work in America, who grow our food, run our factories, and fight our wars.
They love their country, in good times and bad, and they're always proud of America I had the privilege of living most of my life in a small town.
I'm on the floor for the speech-stuck in the middle of a bunch of delegates from, I believe, Colorado-and at the line "They are the ones who do some of the hardest work," the section explodes in cheers.
I look back up at Palin and she has a bit of a confident grin on her face now Not quite a smirk, that would be unfair to say, but she's oozing confidence after delivering these loaded lines From now through the end of her speech there will be a definite edge to her voice, an edge that also fills the air of this building.
Before I have any chance of noticing it she's moved beyond the speaking part of the program and is suddenly, effortlessly, deep into the signaling process, a place most politicians only reach with great effort, and clumsily, if at all But Palin is the opposite of clumsy: she's in the dog-whistle portion of the speech and doing triple lutzes and backflips.
She starts talking about her experience as mayor of Wasilla, Alaska:
I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a "community organizer," except that you have actual responsibilities I might add that in small towns, we don't quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working people when they are listening and then talks about how bitterly they cling to their religion and guns when those people aren't listening.
We tend to prefer candidates who don't talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco.
The TV talking heads here will surely focus on the insult to Barack Obama and will miss the far more important part of this speech-the fact that Palin has moved from talking about small-town folks as They a few seconds ago to We now-We don't know what to make of this, We prefer this It doesn't take a whole lot of thought to figure out who this We is Certainly, to those listening, if you're part of this We, you know If you're not part of it, as I'm not, you know even more.
Sarah Palin's We is a very unusual character to make an appearance in a national presidential campaign, where candidates almost to the last tend to scrupulously avoid any hint that they are not talking to all Americans Inclusiveness, telegenic warmth, and inoffensiveness are the usual currency of national-campaign candidates Say as little as possible, hope some of the undecideds like your teeth better than the other guy's-that's usually the way this business works.
But Palin, boldly, has tossed all that aside: she is making an impassioned bunker speech to a highly self-aware We that defines itself by the enemies surrounding it, enemies Palin is by now haughtily rattling off one by one in this increasingly brazen and inspired address.
She's already gone after the "experts" and "pollsters and pundits" who dismissed McCain, the "community organizer" Obama, even the city of San Francisco (We are more likely to live in Scranton), but the more important bit came with the line about how people in small towns are the ones who "do some of the hardest work." The cheer at that line was one of recognition, because what Palin is clearly talking about there are the people this crowd thinks don't do "the hardest work," don't fight our wars, don't love our country.
And We know who They are.
What Palin is doing is nothing new It's a virtual copy of Dick Nixon's "forgotten Americans" gambit targeting the so-called silent
majority-the poor and middle-class suburban (and especially southern) whites who had stayed on the sidelines during the sixties culture wars That strategy won Nixon the election against Humphrey by stealing the South away from the Democrats and has been the cornerstone of Republican electoral planning ever since.
The strategy of stoking exurban white resentment against encroaching immigration, against the disappearance of old values, against pop- culture glitz, against government power, it all worked so well for the Republicans over the years that even Hillary Clinton borrowed it in her primary race against Obama.
Now Palin's We in St Paul is, in substance, no different from anything that half a dozen politicians before her have come up with But neither Nixon nor Hillary nor even Ronald Reagan-whose natural goofball cheerfulness blunted his ability to whip up divisive mobs-had ever executed this message with the political skill and magnetism of this suddenly metamorphosed Piedmont flight attendant at the Xcel Center lectern.
Being in the building with Palin that night is a transformative and oddly unsettling experience It's a little like having live cave-level access for the ripping-the-heart-out-with-the-bare-hands scene in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom A scary-as-hell situation: thousands of pudgy Midwestern conservatives worshipping at the Altar of the Economic Producer, led by a charismatic arch-priestess letting lose a grade-A war cry The clear subtext of Palin's speech is this: other politicians only talk about fighting these assholes, I actually will.
Palin is talking to voters whose country is despised internationally, no longer an industrial manufacturing power, fast becoming an economic vassal to the Chinese and the Saudis, and just a week away from an almost-total financial collapse Nobody here is likely to genuinely believe a speech that promises better things.
But cultural civil war, you have that no matter how fucking broke you are And if you want that, I, Sarah Palin, can give it to you It's a powerful, galvanizing speech, but the strange thing about it is its seeming lack of electoral calculation It's a transparent attempt to mass-
market militancy and frustration, consolidate the group identity of an aggrieved demographic, and work that crowd up into a lather This represents a further degrading of the already degraded electoral process Now, not only are the long-term results of elections irrelevant, but for a new set of players like Palin, the outcome of the election itself is irrelevant This speech wasn't designed to win a general election, it was designed to introduce a new celebrity, a make- believe servant of the people so phony that later in her new career she will not even bother to hold an elective office.
The speech was a tremendous success On my way out of the building I'm stuck behind a pair of delegates who are joyously rehashing Palin's money quotes:
BUTT-HEAD: You know what they say the difference is between a hockey mom and a pit bull?
BEAVIS: Yeah.
BUTT-HEAD: No, I mean, you remember?
BEAVIS: Oh, yeah!
BUTT-HEAD: She's like, "Lipstick!"
BEAVIS: Yeah, lipstick! (both explode in laughter)
I reach out and tap one of them on the shoulder.
"Hey," I say "Can I ask you two what you think Sarah Palin will actually accomplish, if she gets elected?"
Beavis stares at me "I think she's gonna take America back,"
he says.
Getting this kind of answer on campaign jaunts is like asking someone why they like Pepsi and having them answer, "Because I believe it's the choice of a new generation."
"Yeah, okay," I say "But what actual policies do you want her to enact, or what laws do you think she's going to pass?"
They both frown and glance down at my press pass, and I realize instantly the game is up I'm not part of the We Butt-Head steps forward in a defensive posture, shielding his buddy from the liberal- media Ausländer.
"Wait a minute," he says "Who do you work for, exactly?"
The big difference between America and the third world: in America, our leaders put on a hell of a show for us voters, while in the third world, the bulk of the population gets squat In the third world, most people know where they stand and don't have any illusions about it.
Maybe they get a parade every now and then, get to wave at shock troops carrying order colors in an eyes-right salute Or maybe, if they're lucky, the leader will spring for a piece of mainstream entertainment-he'll host a heavyweight title fight at the local Palace of Beheading Something that puts the country on the map, cheers the national mood, distracts folks from their status as barefoot scrapers of the bottom of the international capitalist barrel.
But mostly your third-world schmuck gets the shaft He gets to live in dusty, unpaved dumps, eat expired food, scratch and claw his way to an old enough age to reproduce, and then die unnecessarily of industrial accidents, malnutrition, or some long-forgotten disease of antiquity Meanwhile, drawing upon the collective whole-life economic output of this worthy fellow and 47 million of his fellow citizens, the leader and about eighteen of his luckiest friends get to live in villas in Ibiza or the south of France, with enough money for a couple of impressive-looking ocean cruisers and a couple dozen sports cars.
We get more than that in America We get a beautifully choreographed eighteen-month entertainment put on once every four years, a beast called the presidential election that engrosses the population to the point of obsession This ongoing drama allows everyone to subsume their hopes and dreams for the future into one all-out, all-or-nothing battle for the White House, a big alabaster symbol of power we see on television a lot Who wins and who loses this contest is a matter of utmost importance to a hell of a lot of people in this country.
But why it's so important to them is one of the great unexplored mysteries of our time It's a mystery rooted in the central, horrifying truth about our national politics.
Which is this: none of it really matters to us The presidential election is a drama that we Americans have learned to wholly consume as entertainment, divorced completely from any expectations about concrete changes in our own lives For the vast majority of people who follow national elections in this country, the payoff they're looking for when they campaign for this or that political figure is that warm and fuzzy feeling you get when the home team wins the big game Or, more importantly, when a hated rival loses Their stake in the electoral game isn't a citizen's interest, but a rooting interest.
Voters who throw their emotional weight into elections they know deep down inside won't produce real change in their lives are also indulging in a find of fantasy That's why voters still dream of politicians whose primary goal is to effectively govern and maintain a thriving first world society with great international ambitions What voters don't realize, or don't want to realize, is that that dream was abandoned long ago by his country's leaders, who know the more prosaic reality and are looking beyond the fantasy, into the future, at an America plummeted into third world status.
Product details
- ASIN : B003F3FJS2
- Publisher : Random House (November 2, 2010)
- Publication date : November 2, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 2046 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 274 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #674,238 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #411 in Government & Business
- #440 in Economic Conditions (Kindle Store)
- #489 in Media Studies (Kindle Store)
- 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 informative and well-researched. They appreciate the concise writing style that conveys its meaning clearly. The content is described as fascinating and understandable, with logical conclusions and explanations of events. Readers enjoy the author's humor and profanity, which helps bring some life to dull topics like CDOs. Overall, customers find the book entertaining and engaging.
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Customers find the book engaging and enjoyable to read. They describe it as an excellent work by an author who makes Rolling Stone. The humor complements the analysis well, making it a gripping read for readers.
"...readable and accessible, it has a level of humor that works very well alongside his analysis...." Read more
"...This is fantastic stuff, and a gripping read...." Read more
"...But, that's OK. It is a really good read, often quite funny AND very informative...." Read more
"...While we the rich take the cash out the backdoor. Cool book!!!!" Read more
Customers find the book informative and well-researched. They appreciate the insightful analysis and writing style. Readers describe it as educational, significant, and persuading.
"...knows this subject inside and out and as a result, is able to provide insightful analysis that I haven't been able to find anywhere else...." Read more
"...But, that's OK. It is a really good read, often quite funny AND very informative...." Read more
"This book was a startling eye opener and wake up call regarding what is going on in the manipulations of the financial markets...." Read more
"...local government chicanery this book provides an excellent introduction to the irresponsible folly that plagues our society behind the scenes...." Read more
Customers find the book's content engaging and informative. They appreciate the author's ability to make complex financial and political issues understandable. The narrative is rendered in an interesting way, drawing logical conclusions. Readers also mention that the book provides factual accounts of people, places, and events involved in the financial crisis.
"...different aspects of the recent financial crises and their causes are highly readable and accessible to the general public...." Read more
"...It is the most readable--and certainly the most entertaining--account of the financial crisis that I have come across. Highly recommended." Read more
"...Taibbi stays well within his comfort zone of commentary and explanation of events. Both of these features make this a great read...." Read more
"...Additionally I think this book serves as a reminder that investigative journalism is a gift to society and that people who do it well deserve to be..." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and easy to understand. They appreciate the author's clear explanations of financial concepts in simple language. The narration is praised as impressive by readers.
"...He gives vivid analogies that most laypeople will be able to understand and connects the root causes of the crisis to the unrestrained greed of the..." Read more
"...derivative markets, commodities speculating, and health insurance into understandable language...." Read more
"...It is the most readable--and certainly the most entertaining--account of the financial crisis that I have come across. Highly recommended." Read more
"...had no formal training in finance, understands it and conveys its meaning with great clarity...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor. They find it humorous, with good use of profanity and rants. The author uses pop-colloquialisms and cuss words to bring life to dull topics like CDOs. Readers appreciate the author's wit and anger. Overall, they describe the book as an easy and heartwarming read that highlights how people have been conned.
"...Aside from being highly readable and accessible, it has a level of humor that works very well alongside his analysis...." Read more
"...But, that's OK. It is a really good read, often quite funny AND very informative...." Read more
"...The writing is frank, easy to understand and the tone is fantastic...." Read more
"This book by Matt Taibbi is a modern-day crime novel, as cynically entertaining and funny as it is beyond the scope of Raymond Chandler, Dashiell..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's entertainment value. They find it engaging and enjoyable to read.
"...complex and sordid dealings of the economic/political system in a entertaining and provocative way, and that's exactly what we get here for 250..." Read more
"...CHECK 4. Is FUN TO READ, IS HILARIOUS, and again this is on the financial crisis you say????!??!?!? CHECK!!!!!!!! CHECK!!!!!..." Read more
"This very well-written book is, in equal parts, informative, entertaining, and infuriating...." Read more
"...Entertaining throughout...." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's value. Some find it worthwhile, with clear explanations of complex economic and financial concepts in simple language. They appreciate the political, social, and economic commentary, as well as the chapter on the huge increase in gasoline prices that preceded the financial crisis. Others feel it's not worth the time or money, with a sense of hopelessness and lack of objective reporting.
"...This is an absolutely ludicrous business deal and when I looked it up, Wikipedia informed me that the money was spent and gone within 3 years...." Read more
"...Another great chapter focuses on the enormous rise in gasoline prices that preceded the financial crisis...." Read more
"...and not necessarily Taibbi's fault, there is a sense of hopelessness about this book...." Read more
"...Hey, everyone is allowed to express their opinion, but the book is definitely not objective... or accurate...." Read more
Customers have different views on the book. Some find it a good review of thievery and scams, explaining how Americans were duped. They appreciate the coarse language that serves well in untangling the greed, fraud, and extortion. Others consider it a gritty review of corruption in our national political and economic system.
"This book is an excellent read that explains the scams that were run on the American public in the mid 2000's...." Read more
"...Make no mistake, this is fraud. It is the literal definition of fraud. And yet, none of them have seen a minute of jail time...." Read more
"...elegance with plain and even coarse language, which serves very well in untangling the greed, fraud, extortion, disinformation, and collusion on..." Read more
"Capitalism at its most corruptive..." Read more
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Wall Street and the US government are the biggest culprits of fraud in global history
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2010I have long enjoyed Matt Taibbi's commentary and observations about politics, society, and religion. When I picked up this book, I expected another humorous, scathing survey of an aspect of American society. However, I was blown away at the level of detail and explanation provided in this book. Taibbi obviously knows this subject inside and out and as a result, is able to provide insightful analysis that I haven't been able to find anywhere else. His explanations of different aspects of the recent financial crises and their causes are highly readable and accessible to the general public. He gives vivid analogies that most laypeople will be able to understand and connects the root causes of the crisis to the unrestrained greed of the financial classes in our society.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who is looking to understand the causes of the financial crisis, but have been turned off by the seemingly inaccessible nature of the details. If Griftopia succeeds at one thing, it's explaining how the central players of the financial crisis are incompetent, sometimes insane, mostly greedy, and always absurdly out of touch with reality.
What is most enjoyable about Gritopia is Taibbi's writing style. Aside from being highly readable and accessible, it has a level of humor that works very well alongside his analysis. Too often economist "experts" who try to explain the financial crisis do so in a much too serious tone, often loosing the reader in incomprehensible details. Taibbi's take manages to be humorous yet deadly serious at the same time. This has the effect of highlighting the ridiculousness of the whole situation without missing the broader points of the very serious consequences of greed on real people's lives.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2011Matt Taibbi has hit one out of the park with Griftopia, which comprises a number of longish political and financial pieces he wrote for Rolling Stone over the past three years. (Yes, oddly enough, thanks in large part to Taibbi and his colleague, Michael Hastings, who brought down the command of Gen. Stanley McChrystal, Rolling Stone has again become one of the preeminent news-analysis organs of the Left.) It chronicles in detail a number of instances in which some of our most venerable economic and political institutions and leaders have been successfully scamming the American people, sucking the country dry of wealth and quickly turning it into a Third World oligarchy or plutocracy. Taibbi counts himself part of the illustrious and esteemed tradition of muckrakers, and he does not shrink or hesitate in his justifiably wrathful diatribes against greedy, Wall-Street-bred politicos like Alan Greenspan, Timothy Geithner, and Bob Rubin; Wall Street CEOs such as Lloyd Blankfein, John Thain, and Ken Lewis; and gutless, unprincipled "leaders" of both parties--Barack Obama in particular. Taibbi is especially deft at explaining the complexities of the causes behind our recent financial collapse, ably translating the workings of mortgages, bond and derivative markets, commodities speculating, and health insurance into understandable language. He demonstrates how the moneyed elite have been shafting the common people by means of several different scams: the housing and mortgage-bond bubble which has been scrutinized in so many places--few as well as here; the abuse of commodity futures speculation that drove up gas and food prices two summers ago--and exactly how the media played dumb about the reason behind the spike in prices; the mass selling of American infrastructure and real estate to foreign concerns by right-leaning anti-tax politicians to make up for the revenue lost through popular "tax cuts;" and the Democratic Party's massive mishandling of health-care reform, and how, despite all campaign promises to the contrary, it was never meant to actually change much except for forcing the uninsured to buy health insurance from greedy and highly inefficient insurance companies (he even reveals the going rate for a vote in favor of Obamacare: $100 million per congressional district). This is fantastic stuff, and a gripping read. If you are worried about the economic state of affairs in our country, and rightfully don't trust existing political entities with dealing with these problems, read this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2010Griftopia is not really a book in the ordinary sense of the word. It is a series of more or less independent essays focusing mostly on the recent financial crisis. Any one of these could be read by itself as, say, an in-depth magazine article. In this way, the book doesn't really flow as a coherent narrative. But, that's OK. It is a really good read, often quite funny AND very informative.
One big problem with this approach is that the essays (chapters) vary wildly in quality. I thought that the first chapter was perhaps the best. In it he describes those who engage in the populist outrage that is the Tea Party in a very perceptive fashion. Contrary a few Glen Beck cretins here who react to this chapter by ranting and raving about "leftists" and "socialists", Taibi actually takes a nuanced view towards the movement. While he certainly does not admire those that hypocritically obsess about federal spending now when they were uniformly silent when G.W. Bush pushed through a purely deficit-funded expansion of Medicare, he actually has considerable sympathy for some of their frustrations. He deftly describes a grotesque government regulatory overreach in New York state over a building project that accomplished nothing beyond the enrichment of lawyers. It's this type of local regulation that's the problem, not federal regulation of Wall street that the Tea partiers have been duped into opposing.
Another great chapter focuses on the enormous rise in gasoline prices that preceded the financial crisis. He shows pretty convincingly that this was caused by commodities speculation made possible by a series of secret letters sent to several Wall Street firms that exempted them from traditional limits on speculation. If this chapter doesn't infuriate you and make you want to pick up a pitch fork, then you don't have a pulse.
I thought that the worst chapter by far was on health care. Taibi focuses almost exclusively on the failure of HCR to repeal the monopolies that insurance companies were granted in the 1940s almost by mistake. He condemns HCR because it simply enriches the insurance and pharmaceutical companies. In doing so, he completely ignores the fact that the insurance companies get another 30 million customers only because they had to give up something return. In particular, they have to cease a series of obnoxious policies, such as using pre-existing conditions to justify denial of service and placing caps on payouts. Yes, Obama agreed to not include importation of drugs and Medicare negotiating on the price of drugs, but he got something in return. The pharmaceutical companies agreed to lower prices and to refrain from a Harry and Sally media campaign to kill HCR completely. Taibi doesn't give these issues short shrift. He ignores them completely. His narrative theme of populist outrage overwhelms a balanced and accurate account of the negotiations over HCR. He excoriates Obama for breaking his campaign pledge to oppose mandates, as though this was just a suck-up to the insurance companies. What he neglects to mention is that Hillary Clinton supported mandates during the primary campaign--it was one of the few areas where they really disagreed--and this has been a standard element of Democratic party thinking on health care for decades. Obama just finally came around to Hillary's position. It had nothing to do with giving a sop to insurance companies. It is the price you pay for forcing the insurance companies to cease using pre-existing conditions as an excuse for denial of service.
The remaining chapters were quite good, though a bit profane for my tastes.
It is the most readable--and certainly the most entertaining--account of the financial crisis that I have come across. Highly recommended.
Top reviews from other countries
Richard C.Reviewed in Canada on August 12, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Great Book! Enjoyed Reading It!
Explains how the average American has been fleeced by big finance & the rich over the last 50 decades, starting with Ronald Reagan, & successive administrations since. The successful lobbying, watering down, or outright eliminating safeguards & laws enacted since the last depression, for just 1 example, to limit abuses & excesses by financial institutions leading to what we saw in 2008 with the mortgage baloney.
badamsReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 20, 20165.0 out of 5 stars fantastic reading! covers a lot of topics and can ...
fantastic reading! covers a lot of topics and can seem to jump around a bit, but there is a tremendous about of depth in each area.
One person found this helpfulReport
SayoReviewed in Australia on January 3, 20165.0 out of 5 stars The Real Problem
Matt tells a fascinating story here, full of detailed intrigue and executive connivance. But the real story is that those most affected by the amoral conduct of Wall Street will do little about it, other than a little symbolic "pissing in the wind." There is an old saying, "Collectively, as a society, you get the government you deserve." Today's America, and the rest of the West in large measure, have not been subjected to the brutalities that their forefathers experienced. The West, collectively, no longer has the requisite intestinal fortitude to confront such difficulties. Crime is crime, whether perpetrated by well dressed corporate executives in suits or heavily armed men in full leathers. Crime injures both its immediate victims and the broader societies to whom they belong. And as USA no longer has the necessary internal fortitude to confront corporate crime, it will as it must, continue to suffer even greater injury. A tragic outcome for your Republic and one entirely of your own making.
Of course the present outcome would not have been possible without the generations of indifference to the actions of the Supreme Court of the United States. If the financial industries black boxes have remained somewhat opaque to Americans, the Judicial Industries black box that is Constitutional Interpretation impervious to enquiry. Perhaps an avenue of enquiry for a bloke of Matt's caliber?
Ps This book like "The untold History of the United States" deserves to be made in to a documentary! It would have to be better than the PBS doco that painted Paulson as savior of the nation lol
XerxesReviewed in Canada on June 20, 20145.0 out of 5 stars An Easier Read Than You Expect
If you're interested in the nature of the financial leviathan that strangles our political/economy, this is the book for you. Don't be intimidated by the content, Taibbi turns what would be usually considered wonk-ish into an enjoyable book.
AnonymousReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 24, 20135.0 out of 5 stars ******* seven stars, fantastic journalism
If I was a politician or a banker, I would hang my head in shame. Pity no actions can be taken. What a great read though. Matt's a genius!
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