Crime writer Kleinknecht (New Ethnic Mobs) turns his attention to a different kind of organized crime in this critical reassessment of the lasting influence of Ronald Reagan's presidency-and his hand in the current economic crisis. According to the author, Reagan and his ideological fellow travelers abdicated the government's regulatory role to oversee banking, manufacturing, telecommunications, the media, mining and public welfare, leaving Americans without protection from the avarice of shortsighted corporations. While well-documented and forceful, the book has a strident tone that might put off the very people Kleinknecht tries to persuade-those who have lionized Reagan as the people's president. More crucially, the author tries to lay everything from the decline of America's image overseas to the 2008 meltdown of the global banking system at Reagan's feet, and it is often unclear whether Reagan was the mastermind or simply the figurehead behind which other agents carried out their own plans independent of the president's will. Whatever Reagan's complicity, the policies carried out in his name and under his leadership clearly changed the relationship between the American people and their government, and rarely, the author shows, for the better. (Feb.)
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"This book is borne of annoyance...," crime journalist Kleinknecht admits at the outset of this scathing critique of Reagan's presidency. What "annoys" the author is Reagan's rising stature among historians and the American electorate (e.g., conservative John Diggins's Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom and the Making of History, liberal historian Sean Wilentz's The Age of Reagan), despite the general view of the President as an intellectual lightweight. The author sets his journalistic lasers exclusively on Reagan's domestic legacy: "mergers, deregulation, tax cuts for the wealthy, privatization, globalization," arguing that Reagan championed in word the "little man" and the middle class, but that his policies created more distance between the wealthy and the rest of the country. Examining Dixon, IL, Reagan's small hometown, he attempts to show that ironically many there were hurt economically by Reagan's policies, even as the town renamed its streets and buildings for their "favorite son." The author shows Reagan as a former New Dealer who became disillusioned with big government, repeatedly injecting into his colorful narrative Reagan's confusion of Hollywood images with the reality of America to show how out of touch Reagan was. He ends by arguing that the most destructive part of Reagan's legacy was "America's utter loss of national purpose" because he delegitimized government and glorified self-interest. Kleinknecht often scores points, but his exaggerated language (e.g., "the looting of America") limits his audience to those who already agree with him. For consideration by public and academic libraries.
Jack Forman
Newark Star-Ledger crime correspondent Kleinknecht (New Ethnic Mobs, 1996) turns a critical eye on the Reagan Revolution and its impact, still felt today. The author makes a strong case that President Reagan's policies of massive deregulation, free-market capitalism, budget cuts and trickle-down economics were nothing less than a dismantling of New Deal reforms and a disaster for the country, particularly its poorest citizens. There isn't a lot of new information here, but Kleinknecht's bare-knuckled journalistic prose makes this an engaging read. For example, rather than providing a set of statistics about the impact of Reagan's economic policies on small-town America, the author shows how they affected the president's hometown, Dixon, Ill., where the bus station closed, a residence for the mentally retarded was shuttered and a steel plant endured hard times. To illuminate the consequences of Reagan's gutting of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Kleinknecht demonstrates that hundreds of children who died from Reye's Syndrome could have been saved if the FDA had merely put warning labels on aspirin bottles. Depicting the human toll taken by the Reagan Revolution, the author eschews overt sentimentality and lets the stories speak for themselves. His criticism of deregulation is especially timely, given the current economic climate, and Kleinknecht uses these stories effectively to connect the Reagan legacy to a contemporary culture of self-interest and a Republican Party he views as mired in shallowness and ignorance. "With Reaganism has come an abandonment of all faith in reason and progress," he writes, "and it has accrued manifestly to the detriment of the average American."Tough,well-argued criticism of a conservative icon. Author tour to New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Ore.
"A seasoned crime reporter of the old school, William Kleinknecht has penetrated the showbiz curtain to expose the venality and cynicism of the Reagan era -- and tells us why the crimes of that time still matter so much today." --Joe Conason, best-selling author, "Big Lies: The Right-Wing Propaganda Machine and How It Distorts the Truth and It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush "
"Finally, a fact-filled, eminently readable book that punctures the hot air balloon that has buoyed the Reagan presidency for far too long. Kleinknecht strips the emperor's clothes from Ronald Reagan to finally reveal him for what he was, a dim bulb conservative who set the country on the road that led us to the sorry state in which we find ourselves today. A must read."
--Peter Biskind, best-selling author, "Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll Generation Revolutionized Hollywood"
Bill Kleinknecht knows that it is important to tear down false gods, which is what he does in this scathing reappraisal of Ronald Reagan. A book that will help usher in a brighter political era.
--Frances Fox Piven, Distinguished Professor of Political science and Sociology at The Graduate Center, City University of New York, and co-author of "The New Class War: Reagan's Attack on the Welfare State and Its Consequences"
"Makes a strong case that President Reagan's policies of massive deregulation, free-market capitalism, budget cuts and trickle-down economics were nothing less than a dismantling of New Deal reforms and a disaster for the country, particularly its poorest citizens... Kleinknecht's bare-knuckled journalistic prose makes this anengaging read.... His criticism of deregulation is especially timely, given the current economic climate, and Kleinknecht uses these stories effectively to connect the Reagan legacy to a contemporary culture of self-interest and a Republican Party he views as mired in shallowness and ignorance. "With Reaganism has come an abandonment of all faith in reason and progress," he writes, "and it has accrued manifestly to the detriment of the average American." Tough, well-argued criticism of a conservative icon."
--"Kirkus Reviews"