Typically Political
4 stories
The Truth of American Politics by Nhyatt
The Truth of American Politics
Nhyatt
  • Reads 6,877
  • Votes 219
  • Parts 8
A basic explanation exposing the corruption taking place in American politics, and exploring the true solutions to economic prosperity.
Politics  by NothinToSeeHere
Politics
NothinToSeeHere
  • Reads 5,005
  • Votes 62
  • Parts 12
Political rants from a democrat.
POLITICS by EmmaHopkins278
POLITICS
EmmaHopkins278
  • Reads 655
  • Votes 24
  • Parts 1
This is pretty self-explanatory. A comment on the cutthroat nature of politics.
Political Science 101 by kurtmichaelbrundage
Political Science 101
kurtmichaelbrundage
  • Reads 5,941
  • Votes 126
  • Parts 146
"POLITICAL SCIENCE 101" is a novel about two close friends, Mitch and Ray, best friends since childhood, who embark together (but somewhat secretly) into the world of politics. Mitch, a popular (but troubled) Political Science professor and Ray, an ambitious (but naive) civil rights attorney, decide to team-up and make Ray the ideal politician. But along the way, they find out the hard way what Mitch has known for years and what Ray refuses to believe: The way the political system actually works - bribery, corruption, sex, intimidation, lies, deception and murder. As the two friends grow apart, they both endure deep personal struggles, striving to improve their lives, but their troubles only seem to compound themselves until Mitch eventually chooses the "absolute right" and Ray chooses the "absolute wrong." And in the end - as it often is in life - it appears that the bad guys may have won. This is not a textbook about political science; the title stems from the protagonist being a political science professor, combined with the premise that he and his fellow protagonist are learning the difference between real and experiential politics rather than merely theoretical or ideal politics - the hard way. This novel explores the deep underbelly of the political process, the shattering of their idealism, personal sacrifice, personal delusion, and the battle within all people of deciding between what is necessary and what is right - and what is neither, and what is both. As both men struggle to maintain their morals, their principles, their values, and their friendship, they are challenged by conflicts new and old, small and large, personal and public.