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Homo Politicus: The Strange and Scary Tribes that Run Our Government | 
enlarge | Author: Dana Milbank Publisher: Broadway Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $5.00 You Save: $9.00 (64%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 126004
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0767923782 Dewey Decimal Number: 320 EAN: 9780767923781 ASIN: 0767923782
Publication Date: July 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand Spanking New. Never Read or Opened Perfect Condition Ships Same Day!
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Product Description
Washington’s most acerbic (and feared) columnist, the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank, skewers the peculiar and alien tribal culture of politics.
Deep within the forbidding land encircled by the Washington Beltway lives the tribe known as Homo politicus. Their ways are strange, even repulsive, to civilized human beings; their arcane rites often impenetrable; their language coded and obscure. Violating their complex taboos can lead to sudden, harsh, and irrevocable punishment. Normal Americans have long feared Homo politicus, with good reason. But fearless anthropologist Dana Milbank has spent many years immersed in the dark heart of Washington, D.C., and has produced this indispensable portrait of a bizarre culture whose tribal ways are as hilarious as they are outrageous. Milbank’s anthropological lens is highly illuminating, whether examining the mating rituals of Homo politicus (which have little to do with traditional concepts of romantic love), demonstrating how status is displayed in the Beltway’s rigid caste system (such as displaying a wooden egg from the White House Easter Egg Roll) or detailing the precise ritual sequence of human sacrifice whenever a scandal erupts (the human sacrificed does not have to be the guiltiest party, just the lower ranked). Milbank’s lacerating wit mows down the pompous, the stupid, and the corrupt among Democrats, Republicans, reporters, and bureaucrats by naming names. Every appalling anecdote in this book is, alas, true.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
a most presumptous review August 5, 2008 This book is flippant and excessively cynical. It offers too little insight and too many cheap gags. Ultimately, it's a second-rate nightclub act masquerading as political insight.
The idea for the book is good: a sort of zoological tour of political types in the nation's capital. But it never goes much beyond a clever name and a stereotypical description, whether it's dealing with Christian conservatives or environmental activists.
In the end, this kind of facile categorization and attempted satire adds little to one's understanding of what makes Washington tick. If the book were funnier, it might be easier to forgive this.
fact irrelevant to Milbank's "story" August 4, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
the narrative Mr. Milbank wants to drive prevails, no matter the facts. Not one penny for this hack who wants to sound in-the-know.
would not buy this. dana milbank plays fast and loose with facts. July 30, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Milbank twists facts, taking quotes out of context so that they fit his preconceived argument, even when in fact, the full quote would reveal the speaker as giving the exact opposite message. I would not trust his reporting, and, since he is a journalist who feels himself to be "above" reading blogs, he is clearly arrogantly out of touch with where the media is going. And yet, he accuses others of hubris. Well, it is a trait he possesses in spades, and therefore knows from the inside out.
Homo Immoral? July 28, 2008 Homo Politicus reveals the widespread corruption that presently corrodes our government Mr. Milbank uses the analogy of mystical practices among barbarians of every stripe from ancient Vikings to present-day primitive peoples. But this is only the icing. Mr. Milbank describes who is doing what and shows how politicians, bureaucrats and lobbyists are pumping multi-millions of dollars of taxpayer money into their own pockets and "earmaking" millions more into that of their cronies.
Mr. Milbank's exposé of these amoral, unprincipled politicians, bureaucrats and lobbyists show how in many cases they cater to the Religious Right to use rank and file evangelicals for their own ends. Some go as far as pronouncing an intimate relationship with God. However, the Religious Right's infiltration into politics is not the main thrust of Homo Politicus.
Although Mr. Milbank does not state it, a careful reading of his book shows the fundamental cause of government corruption: altruist/collectivist premises, premises that can only lead to being master or slave. Politicians, bureaucrats and lobbyists have no intention of becoming slaves. Accordingly, they demand that doctors and lawyers provide pro bono services, they command that students commit themselves to gratis community service, they order Americans to sacrifice themselves for the entire globe.
Mr. Milbank shows that Homo politicus has become Homo immoral. Rationality is replaced by manipulating others. Independent judgement is replaced by self-abnegation. Honesty is replaced by faking facts. Justice is replaced by a maneuvering for "status." Truly, Homo Politicus is a valuable revelation of how politicians, bureaucrats, lobbyists and the Religious Right are destroying American government.
Honesty comes in small packages June 7, 2008 I can honestly say that this book is a very good read. Informative, neutral in opinion, and at times just plain funny! After reading a recent Glenn Beck book (An Inconvenient Book - trash) this author approaches the Washington subject matter in a very vanilla way without what appears to be any axe to grind (again Beck's problem). The format throughout the book makes all of the information very clear and educational. I highly recommend anyone truly interested in understanding our representatives in Washington to take the time to read this book.
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