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'American Theocracy,' by Kevin Phillips

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mahatmakanejeeves Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 04:51 PM
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'American Theocracy,' by Kevin Phillips
Book review in the NYT. Kevin Phillips worked for Nixon. He is alarmed.

Clear and Present Dangers

March 19, 2006
'American Theocracy,' by Kevin Phillips
Clear and Present Dangers
Review by ALAN BRINKLEY

....
Phillips fully supports an explanation of the Iraq war that the Bush administration dismisses as conspiracy theory — that its principal purpose was to secure vast oil reserves that would enable the United States to control production and to lower prices. ("Think of Iraq as a military base with a very large oil reserve underneath," an oil analyst said a couple of years ago. "You can't ask for better than that.") Terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, tyranny, democracy and other public rationales were, Phillips says, simply ruses to disguise the real motivation for the invasion.

... The United States has embraced a kind of "petro-imperialism," Phillips writes, "the key aspect of which is the U.S. military's transformation into a global oil-protection force," and which "puts up a democratic facade, emphasizes freedom of the seas (or pipeline routes) and seeks to secure, protect, drill and ship oil, not administer everyday affairs."

....
Prophetic Christians, Phillips writes, often shape their view of politics and the world around signs that charlatan biblical scholars have identified as predictors of the apocalypse — among them a war in Iraq, the Jewish settlement of the whole of biblical Israel, even the rise of terrorism. He convincingly demonstrates that the Bush administration has calculatedly reached out to such believers and encouraged them to see the president's policies as a response to premillennialist thought. He also suggests that the president and other members of his administration may actually believe these things themselves, that religious belief is the basis of policy, not just a tactic for selling it to the public. Phillips's evidence for this disturbing claim is significant, but not conclusive.

The third great impending crisis that Phillips identifies is also, perhaps, the best known — the astonishing rise of debt as the precarious underpinning of the American economy. ... Taken together, this present and future debt may exceed $70 trillion.


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dolo amber Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 04:54 PM
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1. He was on Fresh Air yesterday
Excellent interview...this book is definitely on my "to read" list.
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Jeffersons Ghost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 07:39 PM
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5. yep it's on my "books to read" list too
Maybe our brilliant president can contact a Higher Power and gain the ability to read.
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Richard D Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 05:14 PM
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2. Democracy Now on Tues.
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Champion Jack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 06:59 PM
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3. This part is really Important
THE third great impending crisis that Phillips identifies is also, perhaps, the best known — the astonishing rise of debt as the precarious underpinning of the American economy. He is not, of course, the only observer who has noted the dangers of indebtedness. The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, for example, frequently writes about the looming catastrophe. So do many more-conservative economists, who point especially to future debt — particularly the enormous obligation, which Phillips estimates at between $30 trillion and $40 trillion, that Social Security and health care demands will create in the coming decades. The most familiar debt is that of the United States government, fueled by soaring federal budget deficits that have continued (with a brief pause in the late 1990's) for more than two decades. But the national debt — currently over $8 trillion — is only the tip of the iceberg. There has also been an explosion of corporate debt, state and local bonded debt, international debt through huge trade imbalances, and consumer debt (mostly in the form of credit-card balances and aggressively marketed home-mortgage packages). Taken together, this present and future debt may exceed $70 trillion.

The creation of a national-debt culture, Phillips argues, although exacerbated by the policies of the Bush administration, has been the work of many people over many decades — among them Alan Greenspan, who, he acidly notes, blithely and irresponsibly ignored the rising debt to avoid pricking the stock-market bubble it helped produce. It is most of all a product of the "financialization" of the American economy — the turn away from manufacturing and toward an economy based on moving and managing money, a trend encouraged, Phillips argues persuasively, by the preoccupation with oil and (somewhat less persuasively) with evangelical belief in the imminent rapture, which makes planning for the future unnecessary.

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blondeatlast Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-22-06 07:07 PM
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4. Also read his "The Politics of Rich and Poor" and "Wealth and Democracy"
Edited on Wed Mar-22-06 07:08 PM by blondeatlast
Not only great reading for political wonks, they give you great ammunition against the neocon talking points since he comes from a traditional conservative POV.

"The Politics of Rich and Poor" is a standout political book.
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