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Butler to the World

The Book the Oligarchs Don't Want You to Read--How Britain Helps the World's Worst People Launder Money, Commit Crimes, and Get Away with Anything

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This program is read by the author.
In his forceful follow-up to Moneyland, Oliver Bullough unravels the dark secret of how Britain placed itself at the center of the global offshore economy and at the service of the worst people in the world.

The Suez Crisis of 1956 was the nadir of Britain's twentieth century, the moment when the once-superpower was bullied into retreat. "Great Britain has lost an empire and not yet found a role," said Dean Acherson, a former US secretary of state. Acheson's line has entered into the canon of great quotations: but it was wrong. Britain had already found a role. The leaders of the world just hadn't noticed it yet.
Butler to the World reveals how Britain came to assume its role as the center of the offshore economy. Written polemically, but studded with witty references to the butlers of popular fiction, it demonstrates how so many elements of modern Britain have been put at the service of the world's oligarchs.
The Biden administration is putting corruption at the heart of its foreign policy, and that means it needs to confront Britain's role as the foremost enabler of financial crime and ill behavior. This audiobook lays bare how London has deliberately undercut U.S. regulations for decades, and calls into question the extent to which Britain can be considered a reliable ally.
A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin's Press

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 2, 2022
      Britain and its overseas territories have spent decades soliciting ill-gained fortunes, according to this impressively detailed and frequently enraging exposé. Journalist Bullough (Moneyland) examines how decolonization in the 1950s left Britain “essentially broke” and in need of foreign investment. He also details how budget cuts in the wake of the 2007–2008 financial crisis led police to stop “showing interest in cases of financial crime... just as the spread of online banking and payments made fraud easier than it had ever been,” and explains that notaries, who handle some property transactions, have been regulated by an obscure office under the direction of the Archbishop of Canterbury since the reign of Henry VIII. On a tour of Britain’s overseas territories, Bullough notes that officials in Gibraltar turned a blind eye to smuggling when the Royal Navy shuttered local bases in the 1980s and then authorized low-tax offshore betting on the peninsula. Spotlighting the influx of Kremlin-aligned oligarchs into England, Bullough also details how British officials including Prince Philip feted Dmitry Firtash, a “cash-rich” oil executive who funded pro-Russian politicians in Ukraine and bought a disused Tube station in London for £53 million. Lucid explanations of complex financial matters and a simmering sense of outrage distinguish this timely investigation into how Britain sacrificed its principles for pounds.

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  • English

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