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It's Getting Ugly Out There: The Frauds, Bunglers, Liars, and Losers Who Are Hurting America by Jack Cafferty
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Jack Cafferty Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2007-09-10 ISBN: 0470144793 Number of pages: 288 Publisher: Wiley
Book Reviews of It's Getting Ugly Out There: The Frauds, Bunglers, Liars, and Losers Who Are Hurting AmericaBook Review: "Cherish those who seek the truth but beware of those who find it." (Voltaire) Summary: 5 Stars
Dislaimer: On average, I discuss politics with dozens of people each week and those among them who have observed Jack Cafferty's work for CNN's "Situation Room" program tend to fall within one of four groups: conservatives who thought him a liberal during the Bush 43 administration and now think he is "coming around" to their views; liberals who once praised him and now think he has "betrayed" his liberal principles; those with or without a party affiliation who think he is a curmudgeon (a somewhat younger version of Andy Rooney), if not demented; and finally, those who share my own opinion that, if he is simultaneously so popular and unpopular, he must be doing something right --- and has been doing something right for most of his 40-year career thus far.
What follows are two excerpt composites from the Preface and then the Prologue to It's Getting Ugly Out There.
"I'm the product of a very dysfunctional, sometimes violent, Irish background...my backstory...may help you to make sense of the way I see and inter-ret what's going on around me. People don't wind up with this kind of jaundiced, offbeat take on things without going through some interesting stuff...And this book ain't therapy. I'm content being mildly maladjusted, with absolutely no desire to change. Through all the turbulence of my Reno, Nevada, childhood, I learned a lot about protecting myself...You didn't need to weasel your way out of stuff. If you said, `But that wasn't my fault,' someone else told you, `Bullshit,' case closed...I was born in Chicago on December 14, 1942...I had a bit of an inferiority complex, courtesy of the overpowering, judgmental asshole who had sired me...But I'm no victim - far from it. I'm fortunate. I learned self-reliance and how to survive. When you get old enough to understand the role that money takes in your life - and in your dreams - and you remember how you watched it all thrown away, it can eat at you for a long time. But it can also teach you some lessons that will shape how you make decisions in your life for your own family. It did that for me." Now from the Prologue.
"I get paid to ask questions I don't know the answers to and complain about things that bother me...It's Getting Ugly Out There examines [various] crises, scandals, and infuriating facts of political life that have been and will be driving the public debate as we head toward the 2008 campaign season...I wasn't [and am not] on the air to pull punches...I've always viewed my career in pragmatic terms - as a paycheck, not a pulpit...The book's title is taken from a November 2005 `Cafferty File' piece I did after Vice President Dick Cheney had delivered a speech in which he attacked critics of the botched, manipulative run up to the Iraq war. `It's getting ugly out there,' I said... [Begin italics] `Dissent is not treason [end italics], Mr. Cheney.'...As a commentator on The Situation Room, I get to push about two million people's buttons three times every afternoon...I `m under no pressure to be `fair and balanced.' But then neither is the F-word network when you think about it, are they? God, they hate me when I call them that! I couldn't care less about political spin. My guidance comes from my own BS detector...I like to get under people's skin as a way of salting the mines for the e-mail gold I read on the air...[from] some of the brightest, most engaged electronic pen pals in the world...Viewers who connect with me - whatever their positions [and views] - are a major part of whatever success I've enjoyed at CNN, and a bunch of their finest, funniest e-mails are included here. The news can be a very depressing place. Maybe that's why I have developed a tendency to look at stories with a slightly twisted and jaundiced sense of humor...This book discusses how the politicians and the people who manipulate public opinion have made this country more polarized than ever...This game of ideological `gotcha' keeps us from pulling together. Divide and rule. This book offers a tough, no non-sense look at what needs to be done to glue us back together...I react viscerally when the headlines get my blood boiling...I attack the status quo because it's flawed and dangerous...Are there solutions to turn around this crisis and fix it? Absolutely."
These two excerpt composites provide a far better introduction to both Jack Cafferty and his book than I possibly could. Better yet, they suggest the thrust and flavor of his personality. Please keep in mind that this book was published on September 10, 2007, at the outset of what was to become the longest presidential campaign thus far. Also keep in mind that, as Cafferty points out, he feels no external pressure or personal sense of obligation to be "fair and balanced" when expressing his opinions. Like Sabatini's Scaramouche, he seems to have been born "with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world is mad." It also seems likely that he agrees with an Irish proverb that brothers John and Robert Kennedy frequently cited: "One way or another, the world will eventually find a way to break your heart."
As a reader soon realizes, Cafferty has had no shortage of targets of opportunity to discuss. It comes as no surprise that the leadership of George W. Bush heads the list. Others include the Air National Guard (in which he served), the Bush administration's response to Hurricane Katrina, the immigration crisis, Dubai Ports World and the security of major U.S. ports, the "evisceration" of the American middle class, the Patriot Act (e.g. the "terrorist surveillance program"), "culture shock" for new residents of Manhattan, vertical integration of media companies, Dennis Rader (the "BTK Killer"), finally getting sober to save his marriage and his life, whether or not the Iraq war is a war, "frauds and disasters on Capital Hill," the Terri Schiavo "charade," and the impact of the 2006 elections.
It should also be noted that Cafferty also includes dozens of his favorites among the millions of e-mails he has received thus far, all of which are at least temporarily displayed online. Each day, he reads several on-air and seems to enjoy most those that have passed through his "BS detector" and then inform him that one of his opinions failed to pass through their BS detector.
Several of Cafferty's comments caught my eye. Here are three brief excerpts. On the American Dream: "For than two centuries, every subsequent generation has had it better than their parents had it. That has been our nation's evolution and its bounty, built upon our core spirit of freedom, our indominitable will and industrial might, the contribution and assimilation of massive waves of immigrants, and the boundless and benevolent American spirit of discovery. Embedded in our national soul is the nation that there would always be enough to go around, and that everyone had a right to fulfill that dream. They will most likely still have the right, but they may well lack the means to fulfill that dream." (Page 113).
Two more, one on alcoholism and anger: "For many years I was pissed off continually only because I was drinking. If I'm angry these days, there's a good reason for it. Make no mistake: being as pissed off and as disappointed as I have been by the outrageous misdeeds and abuses of the people we elect to represent us in Washington, D.C., is quite different from finding an excuse when you're drunk to be pissed off at somebody who cares for you." (Page 184) And another on one of the presidential candidates: "Biden's probably the smartest guy in the race. As far as emotional intelligence goes, though, he's dumber than a fence post because he can't keep his goddamn mouth shut." Cafferty calls such remarks "beyond a slip of the tongue - it's outright stupidity" and cites Biden's reference to Barak Obama as "the first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy." (Page 238)
I agree with many of Jack Cafferty's opinions, disagree with others, but have thoroughly enjoyed the pleasure of his company while reading this book and now look forward to reading Now or Never.
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