Book Review: F.U.B.A.R. by Sam Seder and Stephen Sherrill
Published May 23, 2006
If you couldn't laugh, you'd cry. That adage seems to sum up a segment of liberal authors when it comes to the Bush Administration. F.U.B.A.R.: America's Right-Wing Nightmare, written by the co-host and a producer of Air America Radio's "The Majority Report," is the latest entry in the field of books taking on Bush and the conservative movement through satire, sarcasm, and humor. While F.U.B.A.R. has its moments, it doesn't rise to the level of some of the leaders in the political humor genre, such as Al Franken and Michael Moore.
Like their compatriots, Sam Seder, the cohost of "The Majority Report," and Stephen Sherrill, one of the show's producers, don't hold back. The attack even starts on the cover. Part of the first word of the military phrase for which the acronym "F.U.B.A.R." stands is blackened out, "redacted by the U.S. Department of Justice, as per the U.S. Patriot Act." They open the book referring to the current GOP as the "Rapture Right" and "an American Taliban." Those labels mesh with the fact that much of the authors' satirical attack on Bush and the GOP is on social issues. They start with "intelligent design" and ease right into the concept of the rapture that inspires the name they give the fringe right they believe has gained control of the Republican Party.
In their guide to "Your Place in the Apocalypse," Seder and Sherrill address how to determine whether you will be taken into heaven or spend eternity in a burning lake of fire with Satan. They warn that if you're worried about being Satan's roommate, "the fact you're even reading this is not a good sign." How about homosexuals? "You're doomed. Really, really doomed." And if you're a Democrat? "Satan. Fire. Lake. Eternity."
A variety of styles and approaches are used in the chapters and various sidebars. Yet F.U.B.A.R. has some flow problems and some of the humor doesn't seem to translate as well to the written page as it might to an aural medium.
After starting with intelligent design and religion, Seder and Sherrill move into areas such as Social Security reform and the Clear Skies Initiative. Then they move back to religious or morality-based topics, such as contraception, abortion, abstinence and even "Life as a Gay Republican." Next, we move to their "Consumer Report on Buying a Congressman" and examination of some Bush appointees before returning to being a gay Republican (this time a congressman) and how to speak religiously. In addition to being somewhat choppy, the reader wonders why the authors decided to discuss an issue again, albeit from a slightly different perspective.
- Book Review: F.U.B.A.R. by Sam Seder and Stephen Sherrill
- Published: May 23, 2006
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Politics: U.S., Books: Politics and Affairs, Books: Humor
- Writer: Tim Gebhart
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- Tim Gebhart's personal site
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Comments
First off, F.U.B.A.R. doesn't require periods. FUBAR works... just like SNAFU, FIGMO, WIGMO, WTF, FO and SFB... it's an acronym... and stems from military jargon who (which) enriches the language with milspeak on a regular basis.
Hence, STB, TU, AFU, usually pronounced using the military phonetic alphabet... ie. Sierra-Tango-Bravo, Tango-Uniform, Alfa-Foxtrot-Uniform or
Whiskey-Tango-Foxtrot....
Get a clue....
As well-known as SNAFU and FUBAR may be, when the authors and publisher title the book "F.U.B.A.R." then that is how it shall appear in the review.




This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!