| While
numerous analysts have discussed,
and decried, the geopolitical ambitions
of the Bush administration and
its neoconservative allies, the
attention to America’s imperial
posture overseas has turned our
eyes away from a crucial dimension
of belligerent foreign policy:
the domestic politics of war. Frances
Fox Piven, examines the ways the
war on terror served to shore up
the Bush administration’s
political base and analyzes the
manner in which flag-waving politicians
used the emotional fog of war to
further their regressive social
and economic agendas.
|