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Homo Politicus

The Strange and Scary Tribes that Run Our Government

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
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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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 1, 2007
      Mix one part freshman anthropology with nine parts Washington insider politics and you'll get this caustic sendup of “Potomac Man.” Veteran Washington Post
      political reporter Milbank rummages through a bagful of (sometimes forced) ethnographic clichés—consultants and pollsters are shamans, lobbyists are the Beltway version of Melanesian Big Men—but takes none of them seriously. These pseudoscholarly conceits are just pegs on which to hang his colorful accounts of recent Washington scandals, humiliations and felonies. Many of these, like the three-ring circus surrounding superlobbyist Jack Abramoff, are well known, but the author also spotlights the everyday antics of congressmen and the behind-the-scenes skullduggery that propels the ship of state. His contempt is resolutely bipartisan, targeting both Democratic Congressman Patrick Kennedy for his drug-induced vehicular mishaps and Dick Cheney for concocting “folk tales”—duly debunked by Milbank—to sell the Iraq War. Sometimes the author's derision seems knee-jerk rather than considered; when he diagnoses Democrat Harry Reid with “Potomac-variant Tourette's syndrome” because the senator uses phrases like “intractable war in Iraq,” one wonders about the media's role in enforcing Washington's euphemistic double-talk. Still, Milbank knows where the fossils are buried and offers a canny, entertaining field guide to the manners and misdeeds of the political species.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2007
      Potomac Man is a species particular to the Washington, D.C., area, with unflattering parallels to other cultures, from the ancient Greeks to Vikings. Washington Post columnist Milbank draws on his amateur impulses as an anthropologist and many yearsspent covering the puzzling culture of Potomac Man to offer an acerbic, hilarious, and penetrating look at modern American politics as practiced by the legislators, lobbyists, jurists, journalists, and strategists who occupy the nation's capital. The separate tribes of Republicans and Democrats find commonality in shared status symbols, purification and shunning rituals, and other habits and mores. Milbanksees fundraisers and voter registration drives as rites of intensification and solidarity. The U.S. Constitution is the sacred text of Potomac Man, with powerful shamans?Supreme Court justices?designated to interpret its meaning. But presidential advisor Karl Rove, with his uncanny ability to read political tea leaves, has until recently been the ?most widely admired shaman in all of Potomac Land.? With the approach of the 2008 elections, readers will enjoy the humor and insight in this look at political culture.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 25, 2008
      This amusing and shrewd look at Washington politicians, bureaucrats and even Milbank's fellow reporters is endlessly entertaining, and Johnny Heller is in on the joke. He has a familiarity with the material as if he wrote it himself, allowing him to capture the true intent of every moment, be it comedy, melodrama or purely informational. His pace is swift and his “average guy” tone makes this reading work. His conversation is engaging and enjoyable; he seems to know when you're laughing and when you simply can't believe how inane politics can really be, and he's right there with you every step of the way for this fun, charming and true tale of Washington politics. Simultaneous release with the Doubleday hardcover (Reviews, Oct. 1).

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