Sanders dedicated the book to his older brother, Larry, who introduced him to the writings of Sigmund Freud and Karl Marx, while the family struggled to make ends meet. This interested him in subjects such as politics and history. Larry is a member of the Green Party of England and Wales.[1]
According to Crown, the book is "a progressive takedown of the über-capitalist status quo."[2] Sanders refers to American billionaires as oligarchs.[3] He specifically calls Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, "the embodiment of the extreme corporate greed that shapes our times."[4]
Sanders discusses income inequality in the United States, how the influx of money impacts democracy, and suggests that corporations are contributing to the climate crisis.[5] He warns about technological unemployment stemming from increased automation, calling for increasing taxes on companies that rely excessively on automation to cut costs.[6] Sanders also talks about news deserts and how the lack of local news leads people to pay more attention to conspiracy theories on social media. He advocates for providing federal funding for local media.[3]
Tickets for Sanders' U.S. tour were sold on Ticketmaster, for up to $95 each in Washington.[12] He was paid $170,000 by Penguin Random House for the book. Sanders did not schedule or price the tour and gets none of its proceeds.[21]
Sanders also visited the Netherlands[22] and Belgium[23] to promote the Dutch translation of his book, "Het is oké om kwaad te zijn op het kapitalisme".
Reception
On its release day, February 21, It's OK to be Angry About Capitalism topped Amazon's best-seller list in the U.S. national government, political economy, and economic conditions categories.[5] According to The Sydney Morning Herald, the book is a "damning indictment of the past 40 years of largely unfettered, neoliberal capitalism".[24]Zoe Williams of The Guardian says the book "tackles the grim facts about the economic order that the political establishment wilfully ignores" and "is easily as frustrating and depressing as it is galvanising and uplifting".[8]