The
View from Flyover Country
by Sarah Kendzior. Flatiron Books. 235 pages. $16.99.
Review
by Ed Meek
Sarah
Kendzior is a unique voice in journalism. She has a PhD in
Anthropology. She studied authoritarian regimes. She is known for
predicting Trump’s rise to power. The
View From Flyover Country
is a collection of essays written between 2012 and 2014. Many were
penned for Al Jazeera.
They were originally posted online and were just recently released as
a book. She has a wide range of interests: the media, higher
education, race, the economy. She is on the same page as Naomi Klein
who wrote in The Shock
Doctrine about the way
those in power use a crisis in order to advance their own agenda. The
essays taken together do a good job of explaining how we got into
this fine mess.
Kendzior
traces the election of Trump back to the Bush administration. In an
essay called “Iraq and the Reinvention of Reality” Kendzior
reminds us that back in 2002, in what the white house called, “the
roll-out” of the war, Karl Rove said, “We’re an empire now, and
when we act, we create our own reality.” That reality included the
“fake news” of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq that did not
actually exist. None other than Secretary of State Colin Powell made
a presentation to the United Nations claiming such weapons did exist
and were a threat to us and the world. Condoleezza Rice went on
television warning of a mushroom cloud if we failed to act, and Dick
Cheney leaked “proof” of such weapons to The
New York Times.
In
the years following the invasion and occupation of Iraq, we had
reality television, Sarah Palin, and The
Apprentice, a show
that beamed the decisive boss, Donald Trump, into the homes of 20
million Americans. Then, in 2015, Trump the celebrity was able to
find support for his populist message to make America great again
because, as Kendzior, puts it, so many Americans never recovered from
the Great Recession of 2008 and they needed to blame someone. Trump
offered them Mexican immigrants, Muslims, Democrats, Hillary Clinton,
and her husband Bill. At the same time, he stoked their fears of
terrorism. Like Palin he addressed them as the real Americans, the
true patriots—those who were the victims of open borders, free
trade and identity politics. And he addressed their concerns about
the “Swamp” Washington had become. “I alone can fix it,” he
claimed.
Sarah
Kendzior is from St. Louis one of those forgotten cities in America.
Do you remember the Judy Garland movie Meet
Me in Saint Louis? It
came out in 1944 and was set at the turn of the century when St.
Louis hosted the World’s Fair. She sings “Easter Parade” at the
end. It was an upbeat movie about the time when St. Louis, like many
other cities in America, was thriving. Now St. Louis has high
unemployment and underemployment and underfunded, racially-segregated
schools. Kendzior connects the dots between Americans stuck in low
wage jobs working for McDonalds and Walmart and Americans who used to
be high income professionals who are now stuck in part time jobs in
fields like journalism, academia, and publishing, in what she calls
the post-employment economy.
From
Kendzior’s perspective, most Americans, what Bernie would call the
bottom 90 per cent, are not in good shape. Millennials are graduating
from overpriced colleges saddled with debt. Mothers are forced to
make impossible choices between taking care of their children and
working to pay for daycare. College admissions are slanted toward the
rich, as are internships, because the rich are the only ones who can
afford to do them. Poor people are blamed for poverty and if they
cannot afford to pay their water bill, the water in the richest
country in the world is cut off, as it was in Detroit.
As
someone who studied authoritarian regimes, Kendzior appreciates the
fact that we in the United States have the ability to complain and to
resist. She is hopeful that Trump will function as a cautionary tale
we can tell our children about. She is concerned that the damage he
is doing to the environment, the courts, our standing in the world,
will take years to undo.
The
View From Flyover Country
is well worth reading. I would also encourage you to follow her on
Twitter @sarahkendzior. Here’s a recent tweet: “I’m sick of
rapists and liars and traitors and kleptocrats and warmongers and
white supremacists and the fact that all the descriptors in this
tweet can apply to one person and runs the USA.” If you want to
understand what is going on in the United States today, Sarah
Kendzior is a good resource.