Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Audible sample Sample
Tailspin: The People and Forces Behind America's Fifty-Year Fall--and Those Fighting to Reverse It Hardcover – Deckle Edge, May 29, 2018
Purchase options and add-ons
The result has been an erosion of responsibility and accountability, an epidemic of shortsightedness, an increasingly hollow economic and political center, and millions of Americans gripped by apathy and hopelessness. By examining the people and forces behind the rise of big-money lobbying, legal and financial engineering, the demise of private-sector unions, and a hamstrung bureaucracy, Brill answers the question on everyone’s mind: How did we end up this way? Finally, he introduces us to those working quietly and effectively to repair the damages. At once a diagnosis of our national ills, a history of their development, and a prescription for a brighter future, Tailspin is a work of riveting journalism—and a welcome antidote to political despair.
- Print length464 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication dateMay 29, 2018
- Dimensions6.57 x 1.54 x 9.55 inches
- ISBN-109781524731632
- ISBN-13978-1524731632
The Amazon Book Review
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently bought together
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Persuasive, bracing . . . an essential read if you want to understand the pressures that have brought a sclerotic Uncle Sam to his knees." —Alexander C. Kafka, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Tailspin distinguishes itself within the America Gone Wrong genre . . . All of the book’s chapters on the law crackle with energy . . . In a downbeat era, Tailspin offers some modest ammunition for hope.” —Daniel W. Drezner, The New York Times Book Review
"Steven Brill's Tailspin does precisely what the daily torrent of news does not: make sense. The book is nothing less than a unified (and persuasive) theory of everything—including politics, business, culture—and it even includes several glimmers of hope amid the pervasive darkness." —Jeffrey Toobin, author of American Heiress
“A penetrating and personal examination of why the United States is in the midst of a nervous breakdown. But with his fantastically reported story, Brill also shows how—and who—might restore some common sense and equilibrium.” —Bob Woodward
“An astonishingly shrewd and detailed account of our modern American reality . . . Tailspin offers something unique: a meticulous cross-disciplinary history.” —Mattea Kramer, The New York Journal of Books
“A compelling story . . . The fact that America’s best values and ideas, in Brill’s estimation, contributed to its tailspin should give us more than just momentary pause." —Paul Rosenberg, Salon
“An absolute must-read: a brilliant chronicle of the failures of America’s elite.” —Steve Hilton, host of Fox News’ The Next Revolution
“This is a book that pulses with dry intelligence and righteous anger.” —Philip Delves Broughton, The Weekly Standard
“An eye-opening and engrossing treatise representative of all that is wrong with today’s political processes.” —Library Journal (starred review)
“A dysfunctional system serving an unaccountable ruling class is wrecking America, according to this searing sociopolitical jeremiad. . . . [Brill] brings both detailed reporting and wide-ranging perspective to this insightful account of how America reached its current state.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Penetrating . . . in large part because of Brill’s skill in presenting abstruse legal and financial developments in an accessible manner. . . . [A] clarifying and invaluable overview.” —Booklist (starred review)
“Steven Brill is a remarkable journalist who has always ventured away from the herd. In Tailspin, he has identified and analyzed brilliantly the surprising pressure points where our democracy has fractured and failed over the past half-century, leading to today’s overwhelming dysfunction and cultural polarization. In uncovering what happened, Brill shows us that there may be a way back from America’s dire predicament.” —Carl Bernstein
“[Brill] offers ample evidence that American democracy is in peril. . . . Hard-hitting.” —Kirkus
“Steve Brill has written a book that every American should read. It faces the problems of our immediate past unflinchingly. At the same time it sees the seedlings of hope all across America. Ultimately, it reminds us that America is in the choices we make as citizens. The future is up to us.” —Bill Bradley, former U.S. senator
“Lucid and engaging.” —The National Book Review
“Tailspin is a must read for all citizens troubled by the inequities, malfunctions and bizarre shape of our public and private sectors.” —Tom Brokaw
“Complaining about American politics has become a national pastime. But in his expertly researched new book, Steven Brill does far more than identify what’s wrong: he explains why American democracy isn’t working. And he gives us the powerful stories and surprising personalities who are feeding—and fighting—our democratic dysfunction.” —Jacob S. Hacker, Stanley B. Resor Professor of Political Science at Yale, and Co-Author, American Amnesia: How the War on Government Led Us to Forget What Made America Prosper
“Brill's perceptive analysis about how the cult of meritocracy has tragically created an entrenched elite who are determined to defend their moats—and make themselves, rather than America, "great"—should challenge us all. The analysis is meticulously detailed and sourced, building on Brill's long career in investigative journalism. However, Brill shows how groups in America are trying to fight back, in all manner of grassroots ways, making the book also a manifesto for practical change and a rallying cry for everyone who wants to rebuild America.” —Gillian Tett, author of Fool’s Gold and U.S. Managing Editor of The Financial Times
“Steve Brill has built on years of investigative journalism to produce a brilliant and powerful book on the most critical issue of our time: How did America’s core values get hijacked by a privileged class? During the past fifty years, we have undermined our basic national creed that we are a level playing field where any kid has the opportunity to build a better life. This book is not a political or ideological screed. Instead, it’s a model of deep reporting and fact-driven analysis. Everyone, left and right and center, should read it. It will open your eyes and challenge your assumptions.” —Walter Isaacson, author of Leonardo da Vinci
“A compelling, surprising narrative about the unlikely people and forces responsible for the dashing of the American dream—and an uplifting look at those working to restore it.” —Jill Abramson, former executive editor, The New York Times
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Is the world's greatest democracy and economy broken? Not compared to the Civil War years, or to the early 1930s. And not if one considers the miracles happening every day in America's laboratories, on the campuses of its world-class colleges and universities, in offices and lofts full of developers creating software for robots or for medical diagnostics, in concert halls and on Broadway stages, or at joyous ceremonies swearing in proud new citizens. And certainly not if the opportunities available today to woman, non-whites, and other minorities are compared to what they faced as recently as a few decades ago.
Yet measures of public engagement, satisfaction, and confidence—voter turnout, knowledge of public policy issues, faith that the next generation will have it better than the current one, and respect for basic institutions, especially the government—are far below the levels of a half century ago, and in many cases have reached historic lows. So deep is the estrangement that 46.1 percent of American voters were so disgusted with the status quo that in 2016 they chose to put Donald Trump in the White House.
It is difficult to argue that the cynicism is misplaced. From the relatively small things—that Americans are now navigating through an average of 657 water main breaks a day, for example—to the core strengths that once propelled America, it is clear that the country has gone into a tailspin since the post-war era, when John F. Kennedy's New Frontier was about seizing the future, not trying to survive the present.
The celebrated American economic mobility engine is sputtering. A child's chance of earning more than his or her parents has dropped from 90 percent to 50 percent in the last fifty years. The American middle class, once the inspiration of the world, is no longer the world's richest.
Income inequality has snowballed. Adjusted for inflation, middle-class wages have been nearly frozen for the last four decades, and discretionary income has declined if escalating out-of-pocket health care costs and insurance premiums are counted. Yet earnings by the top one percent have tripled. The recovery from the crash of 2008—which saw banks and bankers bailed out while millions lost their homes, savings, and jobs—was reserved almost exclusively for the top one percent. Their incomes in the three years following the crash went up by nearly a third, while the bottom 99 percent saw an uptick of less than half of one percent. Only a democracy and an economy that has discarded its basic mission of holding the community together, or failed at it, would produce those results.
Most Americans with average incomes have been left largely to fend for themselves, often at jobs where automation, outsourcing, the near-vanishing of union protection, and the boss's obsession with squeezing out every penny of short-term profit have eroded any sense of security. Self-inflicted deaths—from opioid and other drug abuse, alcoholism, and suicide—are at record highs, so much so that the country's average life expectancy has been falling despite medical advances. Household debt by 2017 had grown higher than the peak reached in 2007 before the crash, with student and automobile loans having edged toward mortgages as the top claims on family paychecks.
The world's richest country continues to have the highest poverty rate among the thirty-five nations in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), except for Mexico. (It is tied in second to last place with Israel, Chile, and Turkey.) Nearly one in five of America's children live in households that their government classifies as "food-insecure," meaning they are without "access to enough food for an active, healthy life."
Beyond that, few of the basic services seem to work as they should. America's airports are an embarrassment, and a modern air traffic control system is twenty-five years behind schedule. The power grid, roads, and rails are crumbling, pushing the United States far down international rankings for infrastructure quality. Despite spending more on health care and K-12 education per capita than any other developed country, health care outcomes and student achievement also rank in the middle or worse internationally. The U.S. has the highest infant mortality rate and lowest life expectancy of its peer countries, and among the thirty-five OECD countries American children rank thirtieth in math proficiency and nineteenth in science.
American politicians talk about "American exceptionalism" so habitually that it should have its own key on their speechwriters' laptops. Is this the exceptionalism they have in mind?
The operative word to describe the performance of our lawmakers in Washington D.C., responsible for guiding what is supposed to be the world's greatest democracy, is pathetic. Congress has not passed a comprehensive budget since 1994. Like slacker schoolchildren unable to produce a book report on time, the country's elected leaders have fallen back instead on an endless string of last-minute deadline extensions and piecemeal appropriations. Legislation to deal with big, long-term challenges, like climate change, the mounting national debt, or job displacement, is a pipe dream. It is as if the great breakthroughs of the past, marked by bipartisan signing ceremonies in the White House—the establishment of the Federal Trade Commission, Social Security, interstate highways, the Food and Drug Administration, Medicare, civil rights legislation, the EPA—are part of some other country's history.
There are more than twenty registered lobbyists for every member of Congress. Most are deployed to block anything that would tax, regulate, or otherwise threaten a deep-pocketed client. Money has come to dominate everything so completely that those we send to Washington to represent us have been reduced to begging on the phone for campaign cash four or five hours a day and spending their evenings taking checks at fund-raisers organized by those swarming lobbyists. A gerrymandering process has rigged easy wins for most of them, as long as they fend off primary challengers in their own party—which assures that they will gravitate toward the polarizing, special interest positions of their donors and their party's base, while racking up mounting deficits to pay for goods and services that cost more than budgeted, rarely work as promised, and are never delivered on time.
Product details
- ASIN : 1524731633
- Publisher : Knopf; First Edition (May 29, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 464 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781524731632
- ISBN-13 : 978-1524731632
- Item Weight : 1.7 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.57 x 1.54 x 9.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #914,180 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #679 in Economic Policy
- #882 in Economic Policy & Development (Books)
- #933 in Theory of Economics
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Steven Brill (born August 22, 1950) is an American lawyer and journalist-entrepreneur. Brill's most recent reporting and book is concerned with healthcare costs.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Steve Fosdal (https://www.flickr.com/photos/sfosdal/4158323000/) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Brill seems somewhat optimistic that these problems can be solved in the near future. In the concluding Chapter (page 341) he opines that “My bet is that Americans will retake their democracy. Things may get worse before they get better. Events … will become trigger points that prompt Americans to reclaim then legacy of their country’s historic resilience.” I am not so optimistic, but I hope I am wrong. I think that the US will have to become a gigantic version of Greece before there is sufficient shock to make any significant changes.
Brill’s central argument is that with the overwhelming dominance of the political system by moneyed (especially Wall Street corporate) interests, the US has effectively become an oligarchy. I agree with him but I think there is more to it than that. The US is not a dictatorship. It has elections, nowadays usually bitterly conducted. In my opinion, the US has precisely the type of government and economy that the electorate has been voting for during the past 40 years. In case you haven’t figured it out from that time span, I attribute the start of the US decline to the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan. I voted for him in 1980; I haven’t voted for a Republican presidential candidate since then. Reagan was the one who started the concepts of exploding Federal budget deficits and de-regulation of Wall Street. Other presidents such as Clinton and Bush II then expanded on the rot he started.
For more views of the problems covered in Brill’s book, I suggest reading the following books. They are not all left-wing or right-wing (probably unlike the opinions I just gave above), so you can get a variety of views.
• “An Extraordinary Time – The End of the Postwar Boom and the Return of the Ordinary Economy” by Levinson (2016);
• “Failure to Adjust – How Americans Got Left Behind in the Global Economy” by Alden (2017). Brill cites and quotes from this book in his chapters that discuss the consequences on American workers of globalization and reduced international trade barriers;
• “How Democracies Die” by Levitsky and Ziblatt (2018);
• “The Myth of the Rational Voter” by Caplan (2007);
• “Against Democracy” by Brennan (2016);
• “American Theocracy” by Philips (2006);
• “Free Lunch” by Johnston (2007);
• “Relic” by Howell and Moe (2016).
Second, I liked his examples of people and institutions that give hope to us, such as his commentaries on Max Stier of the Partnership for Public Service and Philip Howard.
Third, his discussion of the evolution of 1st Amendment rights leading to the Citizens United case is brilliant and consistent with an incisive legal mind, which Mr. Brill clearly has evidenced his entire career.
I did not give this a "5" rating, for these reasons:
-First, he fails to connect the dots between our broken educational system, which protects incompetent leadership and teachers and the persistence of poverty. There are many causes of poverty, but one universally acknowledged one is the educational achievement gap. We would be better served correcting our educational system's deficiencies, as opposed to using a $15 minimum wage, which would almost certainly accelerate the reduction of low-skilled minimum wage jobs.
-Second, he does a superb job demonstrating that corporate interests get obscenely wealthy from manipulating the system and building moats. However, he ignores the accumulation of riches by elected officials and their families who extort contributions from these special interests through a variety of techniques.
-Third, his discussion of the educational meritocracy is superb, but he fails to zero in on three contributing causes: 1) the unionization of college professors and graduate students that prevent college educations from being more affordable, and he spends inadequate time talking about the devastating effect of the flawed student loan programs. 2) the extent to which accrediting bodies and media like the U.S. News & World Report perpetuate obsolete educational processes; and 3) the inability of schools at all levels to understand that we all learn and grow differently and that getting college admissions at a high percentage is not the ultimate measure of success.
-Fourth, while he correctly attacks companies that are punished insufficiently for violating federal labor laws, he pays insufficient attention to the union practices that have taken many industries, such as the automotive industry, into uncompetitive cost structures and business practices. There are good reasons why many employees who wanted stable employment with viable and successful companies did not want certain unions representing them. He correctly articulates the problems with public sector unions, but understates the damage they have done in diverting money that would have gone to infrastructure rebuilding. He does not adequately discuss the degree to which "prevailing wage" laws and obsolete and wasteful work rules make infrastructure costs far higher than they should be.
In summary, he does a brilliant job dissecting a number of problem areas in novel ways, but he comes at some of the solutions with flawed ways of thinking. However, although the book contains significant flaws in its reasoning, it is exceptionally well worth reading, because he has done such a superb job in problem analysis.
Top reviews from other countries
'Donkey', though, is the modern word for 'ass'. 'Asinine' is 'ass-like', therefore 'donkey-like'.
The definition of 'asinine' is 'extremely stupid'
Whereby every child knows that elephants have a very long memory...