You Don’t Know Me
November 4th, 2009
The Opposite Field | A father and son connect by way of the summer game.0 comments
October 28th, 2009
Q & A • Jon Raymond | Of hot springs, lost dogs and the Oregon Trail.0 comments
October 21st, 2009
Jonathan Lethem Chronic City | Manhattan goes meta.0 comments
October 14th, 2009
R. Gregory Nokes Massacred For Gold | Anatomy of a (120-year-old) mass murder.0 comments
September 30th, 2009
David Byrne Bicycle Diaries | A Talking Head on two wheels around the world.0 comments
September 23rd, 2009
Jen Yates Cake Wrecks | The cakes are so wrong, but the blog is so right.0 comments
August 19th, 2009
Curtis Ebbesmeyer and Eric Scigliano, Flotsametrics and the Floating World | Of junks and shipping trunks.0 comments
August 5th, 2009
The Impostor’s Daughter Laurie Sandell | A daddy’s girl gets a rude awakening. And bad credit.0 comments
July 22nd, 2009
Jeff Johnson Tattoo Machine | The secret world of ink according to a local needle-slinger.0 comments
July 8th, 2009
Portland Queer | A new anthology keeps Portland predictable.16 comments
[August 20th, 2008] You Don’t Know Me: A Citizen’s Guide to Republican Family Values (Tin House Books, 300 pages, $16.95) is a monstrous, Muhammad Ali-like jab square to the Republican groin. Win McCormack, publisher and editor of Portland’s Tin House literary magazine, has compiled an encyclopedia of 110 acts of sexual misconduct by Republican elected officials, upper-echelon appointees and activists who couldn’t keep their pork swords in the deli case. The book is knee-slappingly hilarious at times (come on, bestiality is funny) but also downright depressing: Of the 110 incidents, “46 of them—nearly 42 percent of the total—[are] classifiable as pedophilia.”
With its A-to-Z format, the book reads like a dictionary of sexual sins, and its arrangement lumps together some pretty interesting topics. Take, for instance, the letter B, which includes Bad Sex Writing, Battery, Bestiality and Blow Jobs. Or the letter H, which includes Harassment, Hilary Duff, Hypersexuality and HotMilitaryStud.com.
While many of the GOP perpetrators profiled by McCormack are low on the GOP totem pole (county commissioners, etc.), there are plenty of sexual missteps by the party’s power elite. For instance, Rudy Giuliani’s marriage to Regina Peruggi was annulled by the Catholic Church because the two were second cousins once removed. And “In his 2001 novel, The Apprentice, former Cheney Chief of Staff I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby graphically describes sex scenes between a young prostitute and animals.”
What gives You Don’t Know Me valuable context is McCormack’s foreword, which explains psychological theories behind Republican sexual malfeasance. Hidden behind the Republican image of piety and religious conviction, he writes, is “the phenomenon of conservative sexual deviants legislating against their own past or future infractions.” McCormack has also compiled an appendix chockablock with witness testimonies, copies of police reports, and other public documents if readers want to get gritty details on some of the saucier sex scandals.
You Don’t Know Me takes you on a comedy tour through public Republican fuck-ups, but Democrats shouldn’t feel entirely superior after reading the book. Remember, Dems, your own officials are not all sexually innocent cherubs. (Although, in all fairness, Elizabeth Edwards was in remission.) So while McCormack’s book is like a battering ram to the balls of Republicans, Democrats should be ready for strong Republican rebuttal. Former Oregon Senator Wayne Morse cautioned, “Whenever you see a politician campaign with the Bible in one hand, watch out! Because the dagger of hypocrisy will surely lie in the other.” If McCormack’s research was bipartisan in scope, this word to the wise could easily have been applied to both sides of the political divide.
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"keep(ing) their pork swords in the deli case" should be someone's campaign slogan.









