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 <title>KirkCaraway.com - The Wrong Stuff: The Extraordinary Saga of Randy &amp;quot;Duke&amp;quot; Cunningham, the Most Corrupt Congressman Ever Caught - Comments</title>
 <link>http://kirkcaraway.com/24/06/2007/wrong_stuff_extraordinary_saga_randy_duke_cunningham_most_corrupt_congressman_ever_caught</link>
 <description>Comments for &quot;The Wrong Stuff: The Extraordinary Saga of Randy &quot;Duke&quot; Cunningham, the Most Corrupt Congressman Ever Caught&quot;</description>
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 <title>The Wrong Stuff: The Extraordinary Saga of Randy &quot;Duke&quot; Cunningham, the Most Corrupt Congressman Ever Caught</title>
 <link>http://kirkcaraway.com/24/06/2007/wrong_stuff_extraordinary_saga_randy_duke_cunningham_most_corrupt_congressman_ever_caught</link>
 <description>Duke Cunningham was an All-American success story. The  Midwestern boy who went off to war, became a hero, and rode his fame into  Congress even bragged that Tom Cruise played him in a popular movie. But  the fall of this &quot;Top Gun&quot; was almost as epic and just as cinematic. Today  he sits in prison, branded as the most corrupt member of Congress in U.S.  history. &lt;P&gt;  To the public, Cunningham was a heroic family man. In reality, he was a  hard-drinking, partisan bully with a lavish sense of entitlement and  feckless moral compass. He partnered with rogues like Brent Wilkes and  Mitch Wade, and together they hatched a grandiose plan to get rich wrapping  themselves in the flag. Over time, Cunningham fed Wilkes and Wade tens of  millions of dollars in vital post-9/11 contracts in exchange for millions  in bribes. Their clubhouse was a yacht tied up along the Potomac River.  From there, they traveled the city in limos, flew in private jets, and  hosted all-night parties at posh hotels. Their funding came from &quot;earmarks&quot;  in classified military contracts that were supposed to protect our troops  in Iraq--not be squandered on booze and beautiful women, on yachts and  jets. &lt;P&gt; Now, members of the team that won the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for sending  Cunningham to prison uncover new details in a story still unfolding in  Washington. &lt;I&gt;The Wrong Stuff&lt;/I&gt; chronicles Cunningham&#039;s rise and his  sordid fall. It is the saga of a man who came to believe his own press  clippings and developed an enormous sense of self-entitlement, a man strong  enough to brave enemy fire but too weak to resist the corrupt contractors  and lobbyists in the nation&#039;s capital. It is also the story of the shadowy  side of Washington today. More than just the story of one crooked  politician, this is an inside look at how our system allowed this to  happen. &lt;I&gt;The Wrong Stuff&lt;/I&gt; provides the context for Cunningham&#039;s  misdeeds and shows that more than one man&#039;s venality was involved. Indeed,  there were things darkly wrong with Washington that invited Cunningham--and  others--to steal, often putting American soldiers and Marines at risk  during wartime. &lt;P&gt; If you want to understand the recent outcry over congressional corruption,  then you need to understand how Cunningham and his contractor friends used  the government to enrich themselves. This penetrating, witty, and gossipy  analysis of how they stole and how they got caught makes for a fascinating  read with a lesson for all Americans.</description>
 <comments>http://kirkcaraway.com/24/06/2007/wrong_stuff_extraordinary_saga_randy_duke_cunningham_most_corrupt_congressman_ever_caught#comments</comments>
 <category domain="http://kirkcaraway.com/tags/books">books</category>
 <pubDate>Sun, 24 Jun 2007 10:33:52 -0700</pubDate>
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 <guid isPermaLink="false">319 at http://kirkcaraway.com</guid>
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