Chapter seven is making me absolutely insane because it feels like everything is backwards. Though some elements aren't entirely wrong, it feels like there's a failure to actually engage with what she's talking about. A few examples:
The emergence of the “me” culture is a direct response to our nation’s failure to truly actualize the vision of democracy articulated in our Constitution and Bill of Rights.
This fails to recognise the context in which the Constitution and Bill of Rights were developed. I don't know how a "me" culture was created after a handful of white cis men who were largely slavers outlined how the country would work for everyone else for years to come, when it feels like... that is the epitome of a "me" culture (along with anyone who chose to assimilate alongside them along the way).
Our nation fell into the trap of pathological narcissism in the wake of wars that brought economic bounty while undermining the vision of freedom and justice essential to sustaining democracy.
Which wars? The wars of the 20th century? But you're telling me that the self-centeredness of the leadership of the US wasn't a thing prior to the 20th century? There was no "trap" to fall into; that is literally the DNA of the structure of the US, among other colonial projects that now pretend to give a shit about democracy and human rights.
Whether poor or rich, in the mid-fifties most citizens in our nation felt it was the best place in the world to live because it was a democracy, a place where human rights mattered. This sense of our nation’s vision sustained its citizens and served as the catalyst empowering freedom struggles in our society.
This is entirely backwards! Most citizens were propagandised to by the government telling them that the US was, in fact, the best country for freedom and democracy. However, reading memoirs of a lot of people who refused to assimilate into the US settler-colonial (or have been imprisoned by or exiled from it)... You find that it wasn't believing that democracy was best here; you realise that they understood there was a dichotomy between who was allowed to be free and access democracy and who wasn't.
This is a constant issue, and it doesn't make any fucking sense the way it's being framed here.
By the late seventies, among privileged people the worship of money was expressed by making corruption acceptable and the ostentatious parading of material luxury the norm. To many people, our nation’s acceptance of corruption as the new order of the day began with the unprecedented exposure of presidential dishonesty and the lack of ethical and moral behavior in the White House.
Right, because ostentatious displays of wealth obtained via corruption weren't done in the early 1900s at all. It's not like there were robber barons who paraded themselves as philanthropists (with their families still getting credit for projects that completely dismantled leftist politics in the wake of their union busting and hiring of Pinkertons, like the Carnegies and Rockefellers). It's really hard to read this and pretend that it's true when it's very much not.
Nixon wasn't the first dishonest president or even politician, and people (who benefited) often accepted a lot of dishonesty in those roles. You can't tell me that the KKK could keep existing in political spheres if people didn't tolerate their corruption.
The discussion of drug use in the under classes is appalling and absolutely unsympathetic. This does not make me like bell hooks at all; in fact, it makes me like her less.
Here's another fun note. Here's how she describes Bill Clinton (without using his name):
When our president exploits his power and consensually seduces a young woman in the government’s employ, he gives public expression to this greed. His actions reveal a willingness to place all he holds dear at risk for the satisfaction of hedonistic pleasure.
Compare to how she talks about Monica Lewinsky:
Concurrently, the young woman involved manipulates facts and details, and ultimately prostitutes herself by selling her story for material gain because she is greedy for fame and money, and society condones this get-rich-quick scheme. Her greed is even more intense because she also wants to be seen as a victim. With the boldness of any con artist working the capitalist addiction to fantasy, she attempts to rewrite the script of their consensual exchange of pleasure so that it can appear to be a love story.
Which is interesting considering how young she was then and how old he was, but she's the more greedy of the two. (I don't even care about Monica one way or another, but this is absurd framing of what happened. And she was a victim because she was used by people she trusted who literally recorded her without her knowledge.)
It's really hard to take the rest of this book seriously (the supposed sympathy for varying leftist politics) when she keeps pulling shit that's very much supporting the hierarchies she speaks against.