Done:
The Intel trinity : how Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, and Andy Grove built the world's most important company / Michael S. Malone. - Didn't like how this book effectively stopped at the 486, but still went on for a hundred pages rehashing the same things about people as they were dying off.
Denialism : how irrational thinking hinders scientific progress, harms the planet, and threatens our lives / Michael Specter. - Another one that went off the rails with the last chapter, went from being in that debunking/skeptic mold to advocating for some fad theory about genetics.
The S word : a short history of an American tradition-- socialism / John Nichols. - This was on here before but I never got around to it. Did you know that everyone in American history was actually a Socialist? Thomas Payne? George Washington? Abraham Lincoln? Benjamin Franklin? FDR? Thomas Jefferson? Barack Obama? All Socialists! Walt Whitman? THE ULTIMATE SOCIALIST! Also, there was this guy named Eugene Debs who once ran for President as a Socialist, but anyway, Theodore Roosevelt? Socialist too! I should have just read JFK: CONSERVATIVE if I knew that's what this was going to be.
The great derangement : a terrifying true story of war, politics, and religion at the twilight of the American empire / Matt Taibbi. - This one and the one below from Taibbi have the same structure and I loved it. They're split between multiple narratives. In this case, it's between Taibbi entering into the world of fundamental christianity, 9/11 trutherism (where a guy threatens to kill him for telling the CIA about the meeting that he wasn't invited to but came to in order to make the threat), while also his standard observances of Congress/Washington.
One thing I didn't like, is that after he leaves the Christians, he doesn't follow up on what happened to any of them leaving all kinds of loose threads. I know, it seems like, who cares, but he integrates himself into their world so much they dominate the narrative to where you want to know about some of the stuff post-his bailing on the fake identity.
Also, it has my favorite part of the book, where he shames all the fundamentalists at a Chinese buffett for eagerly opening their fortune cookies. Dat's master level trollin.
The divide : American injustice in the age of the wealth gap / Matt Taibbi - Similar to the above, only is limited to two divide narratives, focused on criminal justice. Namely how the standard for the poor/minority is to be thrown in jail over and over, and the standard for the wealthy/important is to get their company fined. Talks to public defenders and prosecutors and former regulators regarding how it's essentially a rigged game, so leniency is being somewhat intentionally granted, not some factor of the system. The public defender parts reminded me of Benched, which was a good show with a great cast and probably should have been on FX or something and gone more cynical.
Has a chapter about a guy in Brooklyn which chronicles his every arrest over like two years, he gets arrested like 15 times, like half of them are arrests for "obstructing sidewalk traffic" and he gets so fed up that he decides to fight the last one since he and a friend were standing where it'd be literally impossible to obstruct traffic by standing. The public defender tries to get him to accept just a $25 fine (originally $100), but he fights it on principle, judge calls the cop an idiot and dismisses the case. Then the public defenders refuse to talk to Taibbi.

Bailed Out On:
By the people : rebuilding liberty without permission / Charles Murray. - One decent chapter, I didn't even realize it was a Charles Murray book until he started babbling about races and their projected economic performances and I was like...wait. And looked at the inside back cover.
The demographic cliff : how to survive and prosper during the great deflation of 2014-2019 / Harry S. Dent, Jr. - Deflation has a meaning! It's not how you used it! I hope you get acid thrown on half of your face!
Ohhh that's Harvey? My mistake.
Onward:
The seven sins of Wall Street : big banks, their Washington lackeys, and the next financial crisis / Bob Ivry. - Each of the chapters are named after a sin, that's bold and inventive, has anyone done this kind of thing before?!? Can't wait.
Lords of finance : the bankers who broke the world / Liaquat Ahamed. - About the 1920s. Also, I like that name. Liaquat Ahamed.
Flash boys : a Wall Street revolt / Michael Lewis. - "but in the end, Flash boys is an uplifting read. here are people who have somehow preserved a moral sense in an environment where you don't get paid for that"

I think I actually hate Michael Lewis' writing thinking back to Moneyball, the No Stats All-Star, etc.
Bailout : an inside account of how Washington abandoned Main Street while rescuing Wall Street / Neil Barofsky. - I opened it up and did a little scan and it was him bitching about people stonewalling him and I'm like I love these types of books where everyone hates the author! The one about FOIA I read was nothing but that bureaucratic stonewalling and that was great.
America's fiscal constitution : its triumph and collapse / Bill White. - I mean, we know what this has to be about. And I was going to skip it but then I saw on the back Ross Perot commanding "every citizen" needs to read it and I can't disobey legally, can I? I'm unsure on Ross Perot's legal authority.
Suicide pact : the radical expansion of presidential powers and the lethal threat to American liberty / Judge Andrew P. Napolitano. - Finally, the Judge stops writing the "yearly political/current events screed" and gets back to writing about history and court cases, etc. leading to the current state of things.
The last empire : the final days of the Soviet Union / Serhii Plokhy. - As in fairly literally, not like say 1987-1993 or something, but 1991-ish. However, the author claims despite all factual evidence to the contrary that Ronald Reagan's speeches did not bring down the Soviet Union and that American foreign policy has been misled ever since for believing it played a role in the demise of the workers state. Yeah, right, it's like the guy never heard of "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!"
Operation Shakespeare : the true story of an elite international sting / John Shiffman. - Bunch of dudes go after stolen military technology, and I assume kill all the brown people involved. I liked this guys other book about art heists or something.