David Mamet http://www.amazon.com/David-Mamet/e/B000APXE7Q
Excerpt from Amazon:
"My interest in politics began when
I noticed that I acted differently than I spoke, that I had seen 'the government'
commit sixty years of fairly unrelieved and catastrophic error nationally
and internationally, that I not only hated every wasted hard-earned cent
I spent in taxes, but the trauma and misery they produced..."
For the past thirty years, David Mamet
has been a controversial and defining force in theater and film, championing
the most cherished liberal values along the way. In some of the great movies
and plays of our time, his characters have explored the ethics of the business
world, embodied the struggles of the oppressed, and faced the flaws of
the capitalist system.
But in recent years Mamet has had a
change of heart. He realized that the so- called mainstream media outlets
he relied on were irredeemably biased, peddling a hypocritical and deeply
flawed worldview. In 2008 he wrote a hugely controversial op-ed for The
Village Voice, "Why I Am No Longer a 'Brain- Dead Liberal,'" in which he
methodically eviscerated liberal beliefs. Now he goes much deeper, employing
his trademark intellectual force and vigor to take on all the key political
and cultural issues of our times, from religion to political correctness
to global warming. A sample:
The problems facing us, faced by all
mankind engaged in Democracy, may seem complex, or indeed insolvable, and
we, in despair, may revert to a state of wish fulfillment-a state of "belief"
in the power of the various experts presenting themselves as a cure for
our indecision. But this is a sort of Stockholm Syndrome. Here, the captives,
unable to bear the anxiety occasioned by their powerlessness, suppress
it by identifying with their captors.
This is the essence of Leftist thought.
It is a devolution from reason to "belief," in an effort to stave off a
feeling of powerlessness. And if government is Good, it is a logical elaboration
that more government power is Better. But the opposite is apparent both
to anyone who has ever had to deal with Government and, I think, to any
dispassionate observer.
It is in sympathy with the first and
in the hope of enlarging the second group that I have written this book.
Mamet pulls no punches in his art or
in his politics. And as a former liberal who woke up, he will win over
an entirely new audience of others who have grown irate over America's
current direction. |