Following the publication of Perpetual War for
Perpetual Peace and Dreaming War, Gore Vidal was
described as the last â€noble defender’ of the
American republic. Now, in the long-awaited conclusion
to his bestselling trilogy, Vidal presents his most
devastating exploration of Imperial America to date.
â€Not since the 1846 attack on Mexico in order to seize
California’, writes Vidal, â€has an American
government been so nakedly predatory.’ George W.
Bush’s apparent invincibility, and what he may or may
not know - especially about those new â€black box’
voting machines installed all over the country before
the presidential election - are central themes of 'State
of the Union 2004', a magnificent and witty Olympian
survey of American Empire, where the War on Terror is
judged as nonsensical as the â€war on dandruff’,
where America is an â€Enron-Pentagon prison’ - a land
of ballooning budget deficits thanks to the growth of a
garrison state, tax cuts for the privileged, and the
creeping totalitarianism of John Ashcroft’s justice
department. Collected in this volume are Vidal’s
earlier State of the Union addresses, a tradition
inaugurated in the 1970s as a counterpoint to â€whoever
happened to be president’. Here we are treated to
Vidal’s observations on America’s parliamentary
monopoly by the â€Property Party’, with â€its two
wings: Republican and Democrat’, and the oligarchical
rule of the military-industrial-financial elite he calls
â€the Bank’. Imperial America is both a strong
indictment of the United States’ imperialism and a
statement of devotion to its true ideals. To allegations
of unpatriotic tendencies Vidal responds by pointing to
his literary legacy: â€Of course I like my country’,
he says, â€after all, I’m its current
biographer!’ |
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