The enigmatic spectacle of a large-scale collective suicide is always fascinating. Let's think about the hundreds of followers of Jim Jones sect who ingested, obedient, poison in his camp of the Guyana. In the economic terrain, it is happening today in Kansas today. That is the object of this excellent book by Thomas Frank. The simplicity of him should not prevent us from seeing the political analysis of him sharp as a blade. Fixing the attention of him in Kansas, cradle of the conservative populist revolt, Frank with successfully describes the fundamental paradox of the ideological construction of him: the gap, the lack of any cognitive connection, between economic interests and issues? Morales? What happens when the economy-based class opposition (poor farmers and workers against lawyers, bankers and large companies) is transposed / codified as the opposition between the honored Chr...read more