Profiles in Ignorance

Profiles in Ignorance



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“Is it better to laugh or cry at America’s most profoundly stupid politicians? Why not both laugh and cry, as anyone will by reading this new book by Andy Borowitz.”

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A New York Times bestseller

An Amazon.com bestseller

A Kirkus Reviews Pick of One of Seven Best Books of Fall

Andy Borowitz, “one of the funniest people in America” (CBS Sunday Morning), brilliantly examines the intellectual deterioration of American politics, from Ronald Reagan to Dan Quayle, from George W. Bush to Sarah Palin, to its apotheosis in Donald J. Trump.

Here Borowitz offers a witty, spot-on diagnosis of our country’s political troubles by showing how ignorant leaders are degrading, embarrassing, and endangering our nation.

Borowitz states that over the past fifty years, American politicians have grown increasingly allergic to knowledge, and mass media have encouraged the election of ignoramuses by elevating candidates who are better at performing than thinking.

Starting with Ronald Reagan’s first campaign for governor of California in 1966 and culminating with the election of Donald J. Trump to the White House, Borowitz shows how, during the age of 24-hour news and social media, the United States has elected politicians to positions of great power whose lack of the most basic information is terrifying. In addition to Reagan, Quayle, Bush, Palin, and Trump, Borowitz covers a host of congresspersons, senators, and governors who have helped lower the bar over the past five decades.

The winner of the first-ever National Press Club award for humor, Andy Borowitz has been called a “Swiftian satirist” (Wall Street Journal) and “one of the country’s finest satirists” (New York Times). Millions of fans and New Yorker readers enjoy his satirical news column “The Borowitz Report.”

Profiles in Ignorance aims to make us both laugh and cry: laugh at the idiotic antics of these public figures and cry at the cataclysms these icons of ignorance have caused. But most importantly, the book delivers a call to action and a cause for optimism: History doesn’t move in a straight line, and we can change course if we act now.