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More copies of this ISBN:Is That a Politician in Your Pocket?: Washington on $2 Million a Dayby Micah L Sifry
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:" Get rich quick! Read this book and learn how to invest in politicians for fun and profit! Just don’ t leave this book where any regular voters can read it!" <BR> – Arianna Huffington, author of Pigs at the Trough <P>Every day corporations and other wealthy special interests pump another $2 million into the coffers of our elected officials in Washington and their party committees. For their money they get an estimated $160 billion a year in tax breaks, subsidies, and other sweet deals. That’ s $160 billion lifted from taxpayers’ pockets– or about $1,500 per taxpayer per year! But that’ s not the worst of it. Their money also buys them the opportunity to shape public policy to suit their bottom lines. And the cost we pay for that is much dearer. Blending satirical bite with mountains of eye-opening research, this rollicking call to arms breaks the issue into manageable, kitchen-table topics and makes it accessible with graphs, tables, sidebars, quizzes, and fascinating factoids. <P>" Sifry and Watzman lay it all out with no bark on it in this devastatingly straight-forward book– the overt corruption of our country through what we politely call ‘ the campaign finance system.’ Legalized bribery is the root of our political rot and few people know more about how to fix it and have done more to fix it than the good folks at Public Campaign." <BR> – Molly Ivins, author of Bushwhacked <P>" Sifry and Watzman are two of the most astute observers political influence in this country. Their important new book names names and cuts through the bull about the issues that affect our daily lives, in a wonderfully amusing but drop-deadaccurate way!" <BR> – Charles Lewis, author of The Buying of the President 2004 Review:"An e-mail newsletter called 'OUCH! How Money in Politics Hurts You' forms the backbone of this predictable but solid expos of campaign finance. Sifrey and Watzman, staffers at Public Campaign, a nonpartisan nonprofit organization, present materials distributed over the past six years by the group that detail how corporations, wealthy individuals and other 'special interests' drive politics through targeted campaign contributions to both parties. Chapters cover pharmaceuticals, gun control, agribusiness, oil and chemical corporations and cable. Recurring graphs distinguish between money allotted to Democrats and Republicans on particular issues and show the financial responses, sometimes punitive and sometimes compensatory, toward elected officials who vote certain ways on certain issues. While the authors have all the elements of an argument for campaign finance reform in place, its seams show, perhaps due to the 'mad rush to produce this book.' The impressively clear statistics and delineation of specifics never quite gel into a unified critique. Agent, Kim Witherspoon at Witherspoon Associates.(July)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information, Inc.) Synopsis:" Get rich quick! Read this book and learn how to invest in politicians for fun and profit! Just don t leave this book where any regular voters can read it!" Arianna Huffington Every day, average Americans and consumers shell out more in taxes to prop up a wide variety of industries. Thanks to the flood of money in politics, the safety of our food, clothing, air, water, and children s health is compromised, often with deadly results. Americans find themselves paying more f cable TV, groceries, student loans, prescription drugs, bank ATM fees and airline tickets. It s unlikely candidates from either party will be campaigning on these themes, but as this book vigorously uncovers, we are all more prone to being ripped off by businesses ranging from brokerage firms to used car dealers all because wealthy special interests buy favors from Congress with campaign contributions. Published just in time for the climax of the 2004 presidential sweepstakes, Is That a Politician in Your Pocket? is a wry and cutting exploration of the corrupting influence of money in politics. Blending satirical bite with mountains of eye-opening research and magazine-style graphic design, this rollicking call-to-arms breaks the issue into manageable, kitchen-table topics and makes it accessible with graphs, tables, sidebars, quizzes, and fascinating factoids. Micah L. Sifry (Hastings-on-Hudson, NY) is a Senior Analyst and Nancy Watzman (Denver, C0) is a Research and Investigative Projects Director at Public Campaign. They have contributed to the New York Times, Salon.com, the New Republic, the Nation, and Harper s. What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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