The Man Who Sold the World: Ronald Reagan and the Betrayal of Main Street America

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PublicAffairs, Jan 26, 2010 - Biography & Autobiography - 352 pages
Since Ronald Reagan left office -- and particularly after his death -- his shadow has loomed large over American politics: Republicans and many Democrats have waxed nostalgic, extolling the Republican tradition he embodied, the optimism he espoused, and his abilities as a communicator.

This carefully calibrated image is complete fiction, argues award-winning journalist William Kleinknecht. The Reagan presidency was epoch shattering, but not -- as his propagandists would have it -- because it invigorated private enterprise or made America feel strong again. His real legacy was the dismantling of an eight-decade period of reform in which working people were given an unprecedented sway over our politics, our economy, and our culture. Reagan halted this almost overnight.

In the tradition of Thomas Frank's What's the Matter with Kansas?, Kleinknecht explores middle America -- starting with Reagan's hometown of Dixon, Illinois -- and shows that as the Reagan legend grows, his true legacy continues to decimate middle America.
 

Contents

Forgotten Roots
1
Two Views of America
21
The Invasion
53
Year Zero
71
The Looting of America
103
Merger Mania
135
The Effluvia of Commerce
155
The Spoils of Revolution
189
The Great Enabler
205
The Man with the Badge
225
The SecondRate Society
259
Acknowledgments
271
53
279
71
294
103
310
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

William Kleinknecht is a veteran crime correspondent for the Newark Star-Ledger. He previously covered the crime beat for the New York Daily News. The winner of awards from the Associated Press and the American Society of Professional Journalists, he has contributed to American Journalism Review, National Law Journal, and the Boston Phoenix. The author of New Ethnic Mobs: The Changing Face of Organized Crime in America, he lives in Glen Rock, New Jersey.

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