Book Review explaining Trump: "Fantasyland," by Kurt Andersen [View all]
Youre probably going to hear this book described as the one that explains how Donald Trump got elected president.
It does, but youll need to read more than 400 closely reasoned pages before you reach that point. And by the time you do, Trumps election may not seem so surprising.
In Fantasyland, journalist Kurt Andersen co-founder of Spy magazine and host of public radios Studio 360 takes a long look at how we got to the point where wed elect a bankrupt casino operator, mail-order meat vendor, lewd beauty-pageant huckster and reality TV star to the office once held by Lincoln, Washington and Truman.
The answer, which Andersen develops masterfully, entertainingly and just a bit long-windedly, is that weve taken leave of our rationality. As a nation, weve given ourselves over to make-believe, thinking more like children than adults.
Andersen traces the blame back to Martin Luther, who made the case that Christians needed no priests, no church hierarchy. Everyone could read the Bible and interpret scripture for themselves. In doing so, Luther planted seeds that would come to full flower 500 years later, when a frightening number of our fellow citizens feel free to believe anything they want to.
(snip)
America was founded by a nutty religious cult, he declares. He compares the Puritans to Al-Qaida, refers to holier-than-thou zealots and sprinkles in descriptors like berserk, crazified and extra-nutty.
Andersen turns Americas founding story upside down. The real founders of America are the Shakers, the Quakers, the Mormons, the snake handlers, the fire-and-brimstone preachers: in short, the people who took the nation imagined by its rationalist creators and put their own vivid stamp of irrationality on it.
Jumping ahead through the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, Andersen examines a dizzying array of phenomena, including Buffalo Bill, the Scopes Monkey Trial, Disneyland and the internet.
They all contributed to, in Andersens words, the breakdown of a shared public reality based on widely accepted facts. Andersen began writing this book long before Trumps election, but he calls Trump the apotheosis of Fantasyland.
http://www.startribune.com/nonfiction-fantasyland-by-kurt-andersen/444516883/
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Spouse already downloaded it and it apparently starts by Oprah who gave us Dr. Oz with his own line of bullshit.
Hard to imagine Oprah a member of "60 Minutes.."