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The Greatest Story Ever Sold: The Decline and Fall of Truth in Bush's America [ Frank Kelly to further their cause in both the war, and in the aftermath of Katrina . giuliettasprint.konfer.eu: The Greatest Story Ever Sold: The Decline and Fall of Truth from 9/ 11 to Katrina (Audible Audio Edition): Frank Rich, Grover Gardner, Penguin.
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Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!. Seller Inventory This specific ISBN edition is currently not available. View all copies of this ISBN edition:. Synopsis Demonstrating the candor and conviction that have made him one of our most trusted and incisive public voices, The New York Times columnist Frank Rich brilliantly and meticulously illuminates the Bush administration?
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Bush presidency, especially considering the mendacity of the administration's rationale for invading Iraq. Many people don't remember Dan Rather's interview with Saddam Hussein two months before the war. I expected a lot more from this book because Frank Rich wrote it. The spine remains undamaged. It is one long rant about everything wrong. Whatever the merits of removing a dictator, waging war under false pretenses is highly damaging to a democracy, especially when one of the ostensible aims is to spread democracy to others. Rich defends his premise in an organized and data-driven manner which, although I'm already pre-disposed to believe, try to remain skeptical even to my own point of view.
Robert Dallek. Glenn Beck. Leading from Behind.
Richard Miniter. Crazies to the Left of Me Wimps to the Right. Bernard Goldberg. Knife Fights. John A. Talking Back.
Andrea Mitchell. Continue shopping. Its organizing principle is a deceptively simple one: Draw the connections between and among popular culture, mass media and our politics, and chart the way these increasingly indistinct spheres of our national life act one upon the other. Despite this, he gamely holds his own, producing a wry cultural mash-up of politics and prime time TV trash in which he runs the news through his high-speed, anti-administration, OC-referencing Cuisinart.
As in his column, Rich never stops to take a breath, and he writes with an economy of style that relies more on reference and quotation than it does on narrative. It seems to me like a symptom of the same condition.