Governor Newsom bought his “bestseller” while California burns—fake popularity, real failure, and a governor chasing headlines instead of saving a collapsing state.
I don’t buy the hype. I don’t clap for numbers that don’t add up. And when I see a politician gaming the system while the house is on fire, I call it exactly what it is. California’s Governor Gavin Newsom didn’t just write a book—he engineered a headline. Nearly 100,000 copies sold sounds impressive until you peel back the curtain and see the machine behind it. Over $1.5 million from his own PAC poured into bulk purchases. That’s not a wave of public interest. That’s a cash-fueled illusion.
Let me say it plain: when a political action committee
buys your book and then hands it out as a “gift” to donors, you’re not selling
ideas—you’re laundering image. You’re manufacturing relevance. You’re buying
applause in a theater where the audience never showed up. And somehow, that
still lands you on the New York Times bestseller list. That’s not hustle.
That’s a rigged scoreboard.
I have seen how this game works. Bestseller lists are not
pure reflections of demand. They are curated, filtered, adjusted. Sales get
discounted. Bulk orders get flagged. Numbers get trimmed. Insiders know it.
Authors know it. And yet, here we are, watching a governor ride a wave of
PAC-funded purchases into national visibility. If that doesn’t raise eyebrows,
then nothing will.
Now ask yourself a harder question: why go through all
this trouble? Why spend millions to inflate book sales? The answer is sitting
right there in plain sight. National ambition. Presidential whispers. Political
positioning. Book sales are currency in that world. They signal influence. They
tell donors, “I matter.” They tell voters, “People are listening.” But what
happens when that signal is fake?
You can’t build a reputation on smoke and expect it to
hold in the wind.
While Newsom is busy polishing his image, the reality on
the ground in California tells a different story. Homelessness is not a talking
point—it’s a crisis. According to federal data, California accounts for roughly
30% of the entire homeless population in the United States, with over 180,000
individuals experiencing homelessness in recent counts. That’s not a minor
issue. That’s a system under strain.
And then there’s Los Angeles, the crown jewel of the
state, now carrying scars that are impossible to ignore. The Los Angeles Fire
Department has responded to more than 75,000 homeless-related fires since 2020.
Think about that number. That’s not just statistics—that’s danger, instability,
and a city stretched thin. Every call is a sign of something deeper breaking
beneath the surface.
But while fires are being put out in real life, another
kind of fire is being stoked on television screens and podcast circuits. Newsom
shows up polished, articulate, camera-ready. He talks. He promotes. He sells.
And somewhere in that cycle, governance starts to look like a side project.
I don’t care how smooth the delivery is. If the house is
cracking, you fix the foundation before you decorate the walls.
Then comes the darker edge of the story—the kind that
makes people uncomfortable because it cuts too close. Reports out of Skid Row
describe dogs being abused, used as test subjects for drugs. Addicts feeding
substances to animals just to see if they survive. It sounds like something out
of a dystopian film, but it’s happening in one of the richest states in the
country. That’s not just policy failure. That’s moral collapse.
And where is leadership in all this? Leadership isn’t
about climbing bestseller lists. It’s about confronting ugly realities head-on.
It’s about taking heat for tough decisions. It’s about choosing responsibility
over applause. What I see instead is a governor chasing optics while the ground
shifts beneath him.
Compare that to figures like Kamala Harris, whose book
sales—whether one agrees with her politics or not—came largely from individual
buyers, not PAC pipelines. That difference matters. It tells you who is drawing
organic interest and who is propping up numbers to stay in the conversation. And
then there’s the narrative Newsom tries to sell about himself. The self-made
story. The struggle. The image of a man who clawed his way up. But the cracks
show. People see through it. Voters aren’t blind. They can smell when a story
doesn’t match the reality.
You can’t sell authenticity in bulk.
Even within California, frustration is building. Surveys
show declining satisfaction with quality of life in major cities. Rising costs,
housing shortages, public safety concerns—these are not abstract debates. These
are daily pressures. Families feel it. Workers feel it. Small businesses feel
it.
And yet, the spotlight stays fixed on a book tour.
Let’s not pretend this is new. Politicians have used
books for decades to build national profiles. From Barack Obama to Hillary
Clinton, publishing has always been part of the playbook. But there’s a
difference between writing a book that people want to read and engineering a
system to make it look like they do.
That difference is where trust lives—or dies. When people
start to believe that everything is staged, everything is inflated, everything
is spun, they stop listening. They stop trusting. And once trust is gone, no
amount of marketing can bring it back.
I’m not impressed by numbers that can be bought. I’m not
moved by rankings that can be gamed. What I want to see is leadership that
stands up under pressure, not one that disappears into studio lights and book
signings.
At the end of the day, this isn’t just about one book.
It’s about priorities. It’s about what matters when the cameras are off. It’s
about whether the person in charge is focused on solving problems or selling a
story. Right now, the story looks polished. The numbers look strong. The
headlines look good. But the reality underneath? That’s where the truth lives.
And that truth doesn’t read like a bestseller. It reads like a warning.
On a different but
equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the
titles in my “Brief Book Series”
worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






