The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and WashingtonAn All-Access Pass to the Populist Insurrection Brewing Across the Country Job outsourcing. Perpetual busy signals at government agencies. Slashed paychecks. Stolen elections. A war without end, fatally mismanaged. Ordinary Americans on both the Right and Left are tired of being disenfranchised by corrupt politicians of both parties and are organizing to change the status quo. In his invigorating new book, David Sirota investigates whether this uprising can be transformed into a unified, lasting political movement. Throughout the course of American history, uprisings like the one we are seeing now have given birth to powerful movements to end wars, protect workers, and expand civil rights, so the prospect of today’s uprising turning into a full-fledged populist movement terrifies Wall Street and Washington. In The Uprising, Sirota takes us far from the national media spotlight into the trenches where real change is happening—from the headquarters of the most powerful third party in America to the bowels of the U.S. Senate; from the auditorium of an ExxonMobil shareholder meeting to the quasi-military staging area of a vigilante force on the Mexican border. This is vital, on-the-ground reporting that immerses us in the tumultuous give-and-take of politics at its most personal. Sirota also offers a biting critique of our politics. He shows how the uprising is, at its core, a reaction to faux “bipartisanship” in the nation’s capital—the “bipartisanship” whereby Republican and Democratic lawmakers join together in putting the agenda of corporate interests above all those of ordinary citizens. Ultimately, Sirota reminds us that the Declaration of Independence, “America’s original uprising manifesto,” says that governments “derive their powers from the consent of the governed.” Irreverent and insightful, The Uprising shows how the governed have stopped consenting and have started taking action. |
From inside the book
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... Bill Shatner. I am second or third tier. The true gods of the convention are people like Markos Moulitsas—the Kos in Daily Kos. Though he's a thirty-four-year-old army veteran and father, he looks like a sixteen-year-old high school ...
... Bill Shatner. I am second or third tier. The true gods of the convention are people like Markos Moulitsas—the Kos in Daily Kos. Though he's a thirty-four-year-old army veteran and father, he looks like a sixteen-year-old high school ...
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... bill in this legislative session shows they understand the need to face the issue head-on, but shows they also know that if they merely tried to out-Republican the Republicans by proposing even larger tax cuts, they would get outbid and ...
... bill in this legislative session shows they understand the need to face the issue head-on, but shows they also know that if they merely tried to out-Republican the Republicans by proposing even larger tax cuts, they would get outbid and ...
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... bills sent to absentee landowners or corporate executives in New York and see how long [those bills] would be in Flathead County—they'd never even make it here,” he says, contrasting the Democrats' in-state tax cut bill with the ...
... bills sent to absentee landowners or corporate executives in New York and see how long [those bills] would be in Flathead County—they'd never even make it here,” he says, contrasting the Democrats' in-state tax cut bill with the ...
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... bill on a party-line vote, and the Republicans will be embarrassed when they present their counterproposal. As the Great Falls Tribune reports, the GOP is “closely questioned” about “why out-of-state trophy-home owners should share in ...
... bill on a party-line vote, and the Republicans will be embarrassed when they present their counterproposal. As the Great Falls Tribune reports, the GOP is “closely questioned” about “why out-of-state trophy-home owners should share in ...
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... bill that represents [insert state] values and [insert state] common sense.” In the Deep South, subjugation psychology persists from the Civil War. In the Midwest, it's all about the belief that the glorious titans of American industry ...
... bill that represents [insert state] values and [insert state] common sense.” In the Deep South, subjugation psychology persists from the Civil War. In the Midwest, it's all about the belief that the glorious titans of American industry ...
Contents
WHAT KIND OF HARDBALL CAN STOP AWAR? | |
THE BOSS AND HIS FUSION MACHINE | |
THE PERMANENT BARRIER | |
MAD AS HELL AND NOT GONNA TAKE IT ANYMORE | |
MAINSTREAMING THE MILITIA | |
DILBERTS OF THE WORLD UNITE | |
THE BLUECHIP REVOLUTIONARIES | |
CHASING THE GHOSTS OF CHICAGO | |
NOTES | |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | |
Other editions - View all
The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall ... David J. Sirota No preview available - 2008 |
The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall ... David J. Sirota No preview available - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
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