Slashdot Mirror


Fahrenheit 9/11 Discussion

xerid writes "I saw Fahrenheit 9/11 last night, and the theatre was packed & sold out for each showing. Today, I read on Michael Moore.com about the movie breaking records. However, what I haven't seen was coverage on Slashdot, about the movie's opening day." I saw the film on friday and was really impressed. But while it speaks much truth, and has many funny parts as well as truly heartbreaking ones, I don't know how many votes it will sway. But since there is very little other news so far today, why not talk amongst yourselves!

155 of 3,265 comments (clear)

  1. Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by foidulus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, although I saw this movie and liked it, this is not the place to discuss it. This site is supposed to be about technology I thought. The only really interesting technical tidbit of this film was that it was, IIRC, entirely created on a mac using Final Cut pro....
    Let's get back to discussing robots and porn tech!

    1. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      entirely created on a mac using Final Cut pro....

      Now we have two subjects for the flame war! Cool!

    2. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not at all.

      This place is and always has been about "News for Nerds, Stuff that matters to CmdrTaco". He's always posted whatever's of interest to him. I see no reason this should be different.

    3. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by MoodyLoner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you think politics isn't "News for nerds. Stuff that matters" you must still have a job.

      --
      No Longer a Menace to Society.
      Alexandria Morrigan born 2/22/01 l. 20.5in wt. 7 lbs. 5 oz.
    4. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by Zorilla · · Score: 4, Funny

      Isolationist. The world is beyond your 4 walls. Education is always valuable.

      I live in a triangular room, you insensitive clod!

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    5. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by sg3000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Seriously, although I saw this movie and liked it, this is not the
      > place to discuss it. This site is supposed to be about
      > technology I thought. The only really interesting technical
      > tidbit of this film was that it was, IIRC, entirely created on a
      > mac using Final Cut pro....

      On one hand, I agree with you (although my .sig might suggest otherwise). Some people take their politics very personally (making it more analogous to the support for a sports team), so the discussion can break down pretty quickly.

      However, politics certainly fits under the "stuff that matters" category. And in general, we've seen a melding of technology and politics to the point that they're quickly becoming one. Even aside from the DMCA and the RIAA trying to ruin our ability to listen to music, think about these other random connections:

      1. Microsoft hired Bush advisor Ralph Reed to lobby for them against the DOJ-Microsoft law suit. Think about how the DOJ basically dropped the entire case after the U.S. had won a judgment against Microsoft. Is this due to Microsoft's significant support for George W. Bush's campaign in 2000? Is it due to the $4.6M Microsoft it gave in political contributions in the 2000 election?

      2. Al Gore is on the board of directors for Apple? Is this just a case of the also-ran political candidate joining forces with the also-ran computer company? Steve Jobs is reportedly serving as an advisor to the Kerry campaign. Al Gore is also a technology advisor for Google.

      3. In Moore's movie, he says that Microsoft was one of the sponsoring companies for the "How to Make Money Offa Iraq" conference featured in the film.

      4. What does it mean when Bush campaign contributor and HP CEO Carly Fiorina says, "There is no job that is America's God-given right anymore." Furthermore, what does it mean when it's reported (not in the U.S. press, but in the Sydney Morning Herald) that among the companies that provided Iraq in the 1990s with banned dual-purpose items is HP?

      5. What does it mean when Bush advisor and chairman of the Defense Policy Board (since resigned because conflict of interest) Richard Perle was hired by technology service provider Global Crossing to help it be acquired by a Chinese company? How about DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe own questionable dealiings with Global Crossing?

      I guess that's the ugly truth about the world today. When we were young, along with believing in Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny, we believed that technology was about building cool products and politicians were statesmen who worked for America's best interest. Part of growing up is realizing that, among other things, the world is a lot more complicated than that, and believing you can compartmentalize broad subjects like technology and politics is harder than we'd like.

      Of course, you can always choose to not read the article.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    6. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by operagost · · Score: 4, Funny

      We're trying to. Sovereignty for Iraq in just a few days.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    7. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by drakaan · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Yeah...too bad we don't have a congress as part of the system of checks and balances in our country...oh, wait.

      Certainly, the liberals out there would never subject us to any kind of excessive government control if they had a chance...oh, wait again.

      *sigh*

      That article basically says "Bush hampers stem cell research" (which is stupid, IMHO, but hey...he's a religious guy, and I'm not), and "Russian scientists were hampered by politics". Hardly a decent argument that GWB has created a tyranny in the US.

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
    8. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by Hans+Lehmann · · Score: 4, Funny
      Like the 50% of Americans are complete morons.

      Absolutely true. There is still some debate, however, as to exactly which half.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    9. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by I(rispee_I(reme · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the war in Iraq was truly about liberation, then any number of other sovereign states should've had priority. If the war in Iraq was about "weapons of mass destruction", then we would've found some by now. If the war in Iraq was about "ties to al-qaeda", then we should've hit the Saudis first, 15 of the 19 highjackers on 9-11 were Saudis. If the war was waged simply to procure cheap oil, then companies such as Haliburton would be clocking obscene profits in Iraq right now... hey...

    10. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by MilenCent · · Score: 4, Informative

      Do you (does anyone, for that matter) *really* think Bush and Hitler are comparable in any way that's remotely important?

      Yes.

    11. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by janeil · · Score: 4, Informative
      The Pentagon has already stated that troop levels will be kept at 135,000 through the end of 2005. So who is the "we" that's trying to bring the troops home?

      NYTimes By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - Published: May 4, 2004

      "WASHINGTON -- U.S. commanders plan to keep U.S. troops at their current levels in Iraq -- about 135,000 -- until the end of 2005, Pentagon officials said Tuesday."

    12. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by techsoldaten · · Score: 4, Informative

      I will address your comments in order:

      1) To hide, destroy or otherwise make WMDs disappear at the numbers of tonnes claimed by the administration prior to the war would at the least cause an observable environmental impact. This impact could be used to determine the ultimate fate of such weapons, whether or not they were destroyed, so it is a stretch to believe there were any weapons in the first place.

      2) Iraq's armies were crippled by the effects of 10 years of sanctions that left the Army without funds to feed it's troops in the field. Iraqi soldiers were stealing food from local populations in places where they were fortunate enough to be near sustinence, and starving in forward desert deployments at the time the US invaded. Don't tell me they could have carried out an offensive, that idea is completely ludicrous.

      3) The one place in the world where there is serious Oil expertise is the Middle East. Oil in Texas is a hit or miss proposition, and more wells have been put in and gone dry in a week than have been left there. As far as Hialliburton goes, many of the contracts they received were for delivering food, war materials, and even the mail - perhaps there are other organizations more adept at delivering these things, and other companies should have been part of the bidding process.

      M

    13. Re:Let the flamewar....COMMENCE! by goon+america · · Score: 4, Insightful
      " There is a lot of sand in Iraq, which means a lot of hiding places. If you have ever lost anything in something as small as a beach, imagine the scale involved with a "beach" that is 167,924 square miles"

      This analogy is silly. Let's also say that the thing you're looking for was purpoted to weigh hundreds of tons and need an untold amount of support hardware and shelter in order to exist. Thousands of people would have to have at least have some clue where the thing is; you've had unfettered access to these people for more than a year. And you've had 100,000 people looking for it using spy satellites and the most advanced technology we have for more than a year as well. If the weapons really do exist they must have been hidden so well that they themselves didn't know where it was.

      Is there ever going to be a point where you are going to change your mind on this? Say, five years from now, will you still be holding onto this line? You'll still be able to say it then -- the argument would still be exactly the same: Iraq will still be a big country, I'm sure there will be all sorts vague signs you will be able to interpret in just the right way. What's the threshold here?

  2. Re:Truth? by bokkepoot · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's why i always watch Fox news with a bucked of popcorn

  3. Moore's Politics by hamstersonPcP · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The guy's not really a liar, he's just very, very out there in terms of his views. Which isn't to say he isn't right a lot of a time. He's got his head on a lot straighter than a lot of radicals, like say, the REAL liar, the subject of the film... Fill in initials of world leader here. Not the place to discuss it? EVERYONE should be discussing the deceit and warmongering of our supremely selected self-declared messenger of God.

    1. Re:Moore's Politics by Moridineas · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ok, now see, now you're changing what you're saying. So it's not Bush that's the liar now it's Bush "and his administration. Also, I think you seem to have trouble differentiating between a lie and operating on false assumptions. Let me put it this way for you. WHY would bush lie about WMD's? So that in 6 months time when WMD's weren't found, the public would love him for it? No... that doesn't make sense. Damn logic. So you tell me--WHY would Bush lie about WMD's? I think you just told a lie--you have no evidence the administration (not the least of which--Bush) told a lie!

      Falsely invaded two countries which had nothing to with terrorism? You're implying that AFghanistan had nothing to do with terrorism" Now, I wasn't pro-war in the case of Iraq, but absolutely was in AFghanistan. I think someone has a little problem telling lies on slashdot--quit trying to lie and say that Afghanistan wasn't part of the terrorist problem.

    2. Re:Moore's Politics by ergo98 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Two countries? Are you seriously implying that Afghanistan, run by the Taliban (you know - the people currently killing people for registering to vote), had "nothing to do with terrorism"? If this is the case you're making, you're in very little company as few doubt the intense involvement of the Taliban with terrorism.

      The real tragedy of the invasion of Iraq is that Bush took a legitimate, powerful precendent against terrorism (that any nation that aided terrorists would pay the price) and completely diluted it by sneaking his own personal mission in under the auspices of it. While a lot of eyes are being opened belatedly now, but there were a lot of cynical people asking WTF Iraq had to do with 9/11 or Afghanistan long ago, but amazingly the American public came to believe that it was all one and same. This completely destroyed the anti-terrorism campaign in the world's eyes. Now that we've seen that some absolutely insane individuals in the administration think they can get away with an end run around the Geneva convention (as Ronald Reagan's own son calls it dismissively of the Bush administration), global support has absolutely disappeared, and even if another major terrorist attack occurred few around the globe would trust or believe US intelligence (which seems to just say whatever serves their agenda), or would support US operations. Bush entirely holds the blame for this.

    3. Re:Moore's Politics by sean.peters · · Score: 5, Informative
      Has Bush done, said, implied, mimed, ANYTHING that would lead to the impression that he is a "messenger of God"

      Yes - from Common Dreams (who, in turn was quoting the Israeli newspaper Haaretz):

      Bush said: 'God told me to strike at al Qaida and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did, and now I am determined to solve the problem in the Middle East. If you help me I will act, and if not, the elections will come and I will have to focus on them.'

      link for your convenience.

      Another link

      Ok, if you want to talk about lies and liars--and imply GW Bush (I assume that's who you are implying?) is a liar--what's an example of a lie he told?

      Too many to even list here, but here's a typical example (from the Center for American Progress claim vs. fact db):

      Claim: "The Iraqi regime possesses biological and chemical weapons...And according to the British government, the Iraqi regime could launch a biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes." [Source: White House Web site - since taken down]
      Fact: "Iraq did not have a large, ongoing, centrally controlled chemical weapons program after 1991. Information found to date suggests that Iraq's large-scale capability to develop, produce, and fill new CW munitions was reduced - if not entirely destroyed - during Operations Desert Storm and Desert Fox, 13 years of UN sanctions and UN inspections." - Bush Administration Weapons Inspector David Kay, 10/2/03

      Bush knew, or should have known, that his claim was false.

      Sean

    4. Re:Moore's Politics by jsebrech · · Score: 4, Informative

      Also, I think you seem to have trouble differentiating between a lie and operating on false assumptions.

      That's very much true. There is a problem though when you get your false assumptions by ignoring evidence that goes against your predrawn conclusions, and consider unreliable evidence most important because it agrees with them. Most of the whitehouse's intelligence on iraq was taken from chalabi, and the iraqi defectors he brought in to tell them what they wanted to hear. The CIA at that point had documented chalabi as a fraud, with clear evidence of a long campaign of lying and evidence of him cooperating with iran, but the bush administration ignored this and instead chose to believe someone known to be a fraud. At the same time they dismissed what the weapons inspectors were saying as bogus. Ignorance of the law is not a defense in a criminal court, and I think being ignorant of the facts on purpose should not be a defense in the court of public opinion.

      But, hey, you want a clear lie from bush, here is one.

      And that's just where it starts, do a little googling on "bush lies", and you'll turn up tons of lies he has personally told on a wide range of subjects.

      Ofcourse, it is hard to catch him personally in a lie, because he always gets someone in his administration to do the lying for him. They call it plausible deniability, and for me it doesn't fly. He can't not be aware of the liars on his administration. That he not only tolerates them, but supports them, proves he approves of the lies.

      WHY would Bush lie about WMD's?

      I don't think he knowingly lied about that pre-invasion. I think he chose to believe the fabricated evidence that pointed to iraqi wmd's. Still, that just makes him incompetent instead of a liar. That's the problem, you can't look at reality and not go "either bush is incompetent, or he's a liar."

  4. Re:Truth? by Trespass · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's why I always read Slashdot with a bucket of popcorn.

  5. While waiting to see this movie in New Zealand by ATAMAH · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was introduced to this absolutely astonishing documentary called "The truths and lies about September 11th". It's basically a video recording of a seminar held in the University of Portland by this guy called Mike Ruppert. I was sceptical to begin with, since i was expecting this to be just another conspiracy theory but i was proven wrong. He runs a website http://www.copvcia.com I suggest you check it out. As for the documentary that i saw - its an incredibly well-structured presentation, with ample proof for everything that is said during its course. No speculations, just plain evidence.

  6. ... but I'll defend to the death his right... by vudufixit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was very upset when I read that a conservative group tried to pressure theater owners into not showing Moore's film. We have a free market of ideas in this country - if Moore's film is so bad, why not make their own film, or post anti-Moore blogs or buy airtime to put their views out? I don't care for Moore - I think he's a pseudo-populist, a self-aggrandizer, a non-documentarian (his films don't explore issues as much as bolster his point of view). He exploits his subjects (tasteless interview with Charlton Heston, harasses security guards and receptionists in an attempt to talk to the "big cheese," not to mention what he did with those crippled kids at K-Mart.) Not exactly the first person I'd choose to fight for the "little guy" vs. corporate and government power, but dammit, he has the right to say what he is saying.

  7. computers by mnemonic_ · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Think about it... you could easily convince some computer-illiterate person of the superiority of Windows over Linux, or vice versa, without telling a single lie. It's all about withholding the right info, and presenting it in the desired light.

  8. First few comment by clenhart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've seen the first few negative comments about the movie not being truthful. The movie *is* truthful, and if you think otherwise, please state specific claims.

    This movie is right on. If you scratch your head and wonder why progressives and the world are against the war, watch the movie and see the other point of view. Our media coverage of the war has been very one sided and this movie points it out very clearly.

    Don't brainwash yourself and say Michael Moore is this or that. Watch the movie and think for yourself.

    1. Re:First few comment by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Our media coverage of the war has been very one sided and this movie points it out very clearly.

      Well of course it was (and as you said he showed specific quotes of reporters saying, "well yes of course I am biased.") because if they weren't biased they would be boycotted, they would have conservative groups trying to get them expelled from TV, they would be labelled un-American by the president and his staff, and they would probably lose a portion of their viewership to channels that were pro-war.

      As far as Michael Moore being this or that... I don't think of that at all. I think of the MOVIE being this or that. Bowling for Columbine was a much better movie than this one. I found this one to be "ok". It certainly didn't show me anything that I didn't know already (and it shouldn't if you are an American with half a brain and you watch/read the news for yourself).

      The second half of the movie was not good. It was almost as if he ran out of stuff to rant about and decided to half rally behind the troops overseas. It was poorly done and nearly bored me to sleep (I saw the 12:01am showing on Friday morning).

      On a personal note: I don't think it deserves the media attention, the conservative's attention, and I certainly don't believe it deserved multiple standing ovations (LA, NY, Cannes, etc).

    2. Re:First few comment by Apreche · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There is something you have to understand about Michael Moore's movies and truth. Everything he shows on video is true. He doesn't photoshop it, it actually happened that way. But if you pay attention to the filmography and the context in which he shows this true footage he implies other things. What happens is that people go and say "you said this, it isn't true!" when in fact he technically only implied it. The only facts in his movie are the ones you hear him say outright.

      "According to XXX inserst statistic Y here".

      Often he asks questions in his movies like

      "If X is true and Y is true, does that make Z true?"

      People will sall him a liar if Z is in fact false. But he never said Z was true, he only asked. I met this man at U of R just after he won his oscar. He is extremely meticulous in the details and the information. Nobody is going to slip one by. For every fact he actually stated as fact he has evidence to back it up.

      How he gets you is that the average american ingoramus who walks away from one of his movies believes that Z is true. He never said it was, but the masses will walk away believing it like the sheep they are.

      Now, I don't agree with Moore. He is really a socialist green party hippy type underneath. Let me tell you, I like my Adam Smith. Even before this movie I was determined to vote against Bush. And after I get this movie in a format where I can watch it piece by piece I can extract the facts from the implications and get a lot more ammo to use against that corporate asshat.

      --
      The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    3. Re:First few comment by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One of my worst nightmares is that I wake up one day to find that Michael Moore has become the Limbaugh of the left. I don't think he's quite sunk to that level, yet. Personally, I think if our media was more respectable, Michael Moore would never have managed the success he has experienced.

      The problem is that the current media seems to appeal to the lowest common demoninator. Either it allows itself to be bullied into printing the type of illogical causality that you mention or it allows it's pursuit of advertising revenue to interfere with it's responsibility to the public. Of course there are also a large number of those in both politics and the media who promote this dishonest causality.

      I think that the severe decline of primary education and accessibility to secondary education is contributing to public's willingness to accept such low academic standards for subjects that are so important. If you'll remember, before the advent of Limbaugh, there was a general malaise in the news markets. The rise of talk radio, with it's drudge-like standards for intellectual honesty, managed to appeal to an uninformed populace who easily confuses their culture and religion with the government of the US. In a search for revenue, the increasingly corporate owned media has allowed this yellow-journalism to creep into it's mainstream.

      The free market is not friendly to the marketplace of idea's. The free market encourages actors to raise the barriers to entry for competition, which if unchecked, stagnates innovation. The marketplace of idea's is what drives innovation and progress. The goal is to find a balance, which requires an informed and rational populace.

      I believe that Moore has been able to rise to fame, by having true talent to communicate, much like Limbaugh. He's a pretty humorous guy, but he sacrifices intellectual honesty in order to cover a lot of ground, to make a point about a larger picture. I also believe that this method emphasizes points that are easily defeated in debate and involve too much speculation. In 9/11, Moore spent way too much time questioning the President's behavior on 9/11 and the links between the Bush and Saud families. 9/11 was a unique situation, it is difficult to effectively question the actions of anyone in that situation, because too many people will be willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. The links between the Bush family and the House of Saud goes to motive, which is irrelevent to realpolitik. Motive is only a factor in a criminal court, it helps you to understand a person's goals, but the measure of politics is the outcome. Moore's general point, that the Bush administration is a disaster and the US should keep these people from power as much as possible, could be argued based on the facts. From any measure, this administration appears to be incompetent. They have managed to repeat every mistake of the past 40 years.

      The unfortunate thing, is that if Moore had simply presented the case this way, he probably would have lost the majority of the audience. He might have made it to PBS or Sundance's docDay, but that's about it. I can't say that I'm opposed to the extremes on the right and left getting more people interested in politics. It's much easier to rationally argue political points, to someone who has them based on unfounded assumptions, than it is to interest the apathetic.

      In my mind, Moore isn't as bad as Limbaugh or O'Reilly, and he has been able to logically defend his criticisms much more effectively. Let's put it this way, the populist right wing media is like Area 51 alien/black UN helicopter documentary films, the left wing populist media (Air America Radio, Moore) is more like Carl Sagan. Sagan was never accepted by academics because he was such a populist and would speculate too much on information that hadn't been truly vetted. For myself, I got interested in science at a very early age due to Sagan on Cosmos. That interest has made it so I can at least discern the difference between actual science and things that pa

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  9. Longtime Michael Moore Follower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Before the number of comments goes through the roof, I'd like to comment on this topic from a non-political perspective.

    I first studied Michael Moore in college, in a film class, when the only major work he had done was Roger and Me. This was at it's nature a political film, but the political venom was many notches below his last two movies (Columbine and 9/11).

    The prime point that EVERYONE should remember is that Michael Moore can be used as a case study of why to be wary of 'documentaries'. His style as a director is textbook in the art of time manipulation for the purpose of making a point where one would not have existed before.

    I will provide an example: In Roger and Me, he had a clip where Ronald Reagan visited Flint Michigan, promising to bring economic properity that did not exist during the end of the 1970s. The film then explained that GM immediately closed a plant and laid off thousands of workers.

    This example implies that one led to another directly. In fact, there was a gap of 7 years between the two events; one when Reagan was a candidate in 1979...the other in 1986 when the cuts were announced.

    Just remember: he is manipulating to make a point, but to say it is true would be untrue.

    This is just one example; I'm surprised no one has written a book on Michael Moore, because there is a lot of evidence that could be covered.

    Personally, it's entertainment. If you are spending your hard earned money looking for truth or fact, please look elsewhere.

    1. Re:Longtime Michael Moore Follower by Frantactical+Fruke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      'Immediately' is a matter of time scale.
      If GM had closed the plant within a year of this speech, it would have necessarily been because of President Carter's economic policies, as those things take time to implement and take effect. So, on a political time scale, almost as soon as Reagan's economic policies were fully in force, replacing Carter's, Flint experienced massive layoffs.

      The Washington D.C. state machine is rather slower than anything you could implement on a PC.

      For a person who believed Reagan's promises and bought a house, six years is barely halfway through the mortgage, and you would feel somewhat rushed as you went into bankruptcy, losing your job, sitting in an unsellable house that's half unpaid. In that perspective, it's like sitting on packed bags, as foresight would have demanded staying in rented housing without laying down roots in the community, ready to rip your kids out of school and relocate down south or west in search of work.

  10. Personally, I thought differently... by Pollux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do believe that Slashdot's slogan is "News for Nerds, stuff that matters."

    Now, if you consider every single news flash regarding, oh say, SCO, more important than a movie that I believe will make a fundamental impact on the future of how politics are played out in America, the fine, avoid this thread. But personally, I think nerds should be just as educated about how their country is run politically as well as technologically.

    And besides, one of the greatest lessons to be learned from this movie (though I would have thought it would have been learned much earlier than this) is as follows: Never try and forcefully hide information from the public. The more you try and supress it, the more intreaguing it becomes and the more demand there is for it. If you really do want to hide something, try to be as discrete about it as possible.

    But as soon as Disney tried to put the movie away because of benefits they've received from the Bush family, the press pounced, and Moore had a documentary that was "scandalous", and just like Clinton has proved himself, people love a scandal (and I'm sure /.ers will as well...I'd wager this thread will get about 1200 posts...any takers?)

    1. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you really do want to hide something, try to be as discrete about it as possible.

      Wow. Keeping my secrets discreet...why didn't I think of that.

    2. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by kristofme · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wise words: the impact of popular /. topics like SCO or software patents is minimal compared to that of the next presidential election and anything that might shape it. Not just for Nerds. Not just for the US.

    3. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by daniil · · Score: 5, Funny
      The film received the longest standing ovation in the history of the Cannes festival!

      I remember once reading about a (17th century) playwright who had (proudly) measured the success of his play by the fact that four ushers had been killed at the premiere.

      --
      Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
    4. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by rjung2k · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, I consider every single news flash regarding SCO more importan than a movie that you believe will make a fundamental impact on the future of how politics are played out in America, because I believe Michael Moores Fahrenheit 9/11 is little more than a heavily biased satire with truth buried so deep beneath the surface of the film that it is impossible to know what to trust and what to discard as satire.

      See the movie. I have, and Moore lists (just about) every single source he uses up front. Newspaper articles, dates, firsthand accounts from relevant experts... you can't say Moore is distorting what so-and-so says when so-and-so is saying it right into the camera.

      Moore is definitely biased, but at least he admits his bias, and gives you his supporting evidence up front. Which is more than the Bush Administration has done vis-a-vis Iraq.

    5. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by Secret+Agent+X23 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Moore just pulled that scandal out of his a**. He knew from the first day that it wasn't going to be distributed by Disney.

      True. Moore's chief product is not his movies, but himself.

      It's pretty well-documented that Disney told Moore at least a year ago that they wouldn't distribute it. And no one at Disney tried to suppress it. Moore knew what the deal was, he had plenty of time to make other arrangements, and he was free to do so. As to their reasons for not distributing it, I'm prepared to admit anything could be possible, but still... that's their decision to make as long as there's nothing illegal going on.

      And this is not a partisan post. I don't like any of the people involved in this story. Not Moore, not Bush, not the Disney execs. (nor Kerry, Limbaugh, Franken, etc.)

    6. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by JebusIsLord · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, I'm in Calgary, Alberta (Canada), and I went opening night but couldn't get in because the film was sold out. And I live in the conservative part of Canada. The fact is, getting rid of Bush is important to the safety and future of the entire world.

      --
      Jeremy
    7. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by WindBourne · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I think that you will find a great number of Americans who agree with you. I like us being a super power, but with that comes responsibility.

      I have no issue with our attack on Afghanastan. They harboured known terrorists who attacked us.

      But the attack on Iraq is bizzare. He did not follow the advice of his own father (IMHO, is one of our better presidents) about avoiding invading Iraq and certainly not without world consensous. While Sadaam was a mad man and was a threat to his ppl, he was no real threat to USA. Whereas N. Korea government is a clear and present danger to their country, the USA, and the rest of the world, W. basically ignores them.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    8. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by gozar · · Score: 5, Informative
      That's Moore's claim. However, his original version was that Disney killed the film because Jeb Bush would try to take away Disney's tax breaks on DisneyWorld in Florida... that's nice, but no such tax breaks exist for them to lose.

      From the Seattle Times: For example, in Osceola County, Fla., Walt Disney World receives the farming break on 1,600 acres of pasture, timber and nurseries where it grows plants for its theme parks. The land, worth $194 million, is taxed as if it were worth $12.3 million, according to the county land records office. Disney spokeswoman Jacquee Polack said the company keeps a buffer of undeveloped land around the park, but she acknowledged some of this property will be developed.

      But this probably wasn't what Moore was thinking about... :-)

      --
      What, me worry?
    9. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by MilenCent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A lot of people have been harping about Moore's self-promotion skills, especially on Plastic.

      Moore does seem to have some of that, but I think it's been greatly blown out of proportion. I buy what Moore's saying about what happened with Farenheir 9/11, his story there doesn't see fishy, and I'm glad that the movie is seeing wide release instead of dumped into the garbage bin.

      I admit I don't have an excellent understanding of the situation concerning Moore, Disney, Miramax, and the ownership of the film, but as far as I can tell, Disney *owned* the film. They paid for it, and as Moore said, from one source Disney was saying "we're not going to distribute it," while another kept handing them money to get it completed.

      What would I do in that circumstance? Shut up, finish the movie, and worry about it afterwards. Funding opportunities don't grow on trees, and complaining too loudly about the discontinuity would probably alert the Disney upper brass that the funding's still going on, and halt it. When you're already into production, you'd like to not have wasted the time you've already put into it.

      Just my perspective.

      As for hating everyone involved with this... I find that's a more and more common reaction these days, to view everyone with a political motiviation with distrust. I think that shows a certain weariness with the process, and also a recognition that neither "side" has entirely clean hands.

      I don't know if I agree with that view, but I can certainly understand it.

    10. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Just out of curiosity...what responsibility is that?

      The responsibility to use it wisely. When we attack a country it should be to defend our shores, land, society, etc and if it is not to defend our shores, then it should be in conjuction with world approval. When Al Qaida attacks us, then hides in a country that protects it, then we have the right to go after them.

      But we should not be invading countries. When Iraq invade Kuwait, Bush built a global coalition to stop that. The group promised to not invade Iraq. They kept to their word. W. invaded Iraq on known false premises. That is irresponsible from both a global perspective as well as a US perspective.

      So you have no issue with innocent people being killed as long as it is for a "good cause"?

      Do I like bombs killing innocent ppl? No. But I think that every nation has the right to protect them selves. If a country is going to harbour terrorists, then they should be prepared for a counter attack.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    11. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by z-thoughts · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Moore lists (just about) every single source he uses up front. Newspaper articles, dates, firsthand accounts from relevant experts... you can't say Moore is distorting what so-and-so says when so-and-so is saying it right into the camera.

      Your kidding right. Yeah he lists his sources and uses parts of them. The trick is to the "parts of them" that he uses. He is at good at editing the truth and getting people to believe his innuendos and half-truths as the Nazi propagandist were.

      For example: Moore rushes a Senator unexpectedly and starts asking him questions about his family contributing its kids for the war. The Senator replies that he has two nephews in the military and one is about to be deployed to the Middle East. Him asking the question is in the movie. The Senators response is not though, leading those people watching the movie to beleive in a LIE.

      This is what Moore is good at. Distorting the truth so much and so well, that his followers eventually think that it is the truth. Moore is so full of BS he could fertilize the world into farming land.

    12. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by Mr2cents · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The months leading to the war were really surrealistic. The US government was very keen to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, coming up with false evidence, and to date nothing has been found. However, at the same time N.-Korea was firing test rockets over Japan, and shows international nuclear inspectors the door!

      I really wonder how Bush could get more than 1 vote! What credibility does he have left?

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    13. Re:Personally, I thought differently... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      See the movie. I... say Moore is distorting... his supporting evidence.

      I just quoted your own words to prove that you think Moore is a liar. Those are your words, right? Then how could I possibly be misrepresenting your opinion?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  11. Re:Extreme views by paroneayea · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm no american, so american political views be damned; I just want to see the guy piss over several people!


    And from the standpoint of someone who is an American, I think many of us would like to see that too... if only because it would be a great change of pace after having our civil liberties pissed on by.... certain individuals.
    --
    http://mediagoblin.org/
  12. Re:Extreme views by spj524 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Don't copy other people's opinions; listen to both sides of the story and make your own.

    Exactly. Don't believe what anyone tells you without going out and doing some research yourself. If what you find confirms what you are told, then and only then can you consider it as fact. I see too many people on both sides pick up quick buzz-phrases and run with them only to be made a complete fool by someone who is more informed. Do your homework.

    /wow. this took 4 'Previews'... HTML is rusty

  13. Re:Dishonest by glsunder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Regardless of his politics, the man is basically dishonest, so you are left with the task of trying to sort the bullshit from the truth. Good luck!

    What's funny is I'm not sure whether you were replying to a post about gwb or it was a post on moore. That statement could pretty accurately apply to 90% of people in politics.

  14. My Review by Malggi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, I went to see Fahrenheit 9/11 tonight and I thought it was pretty good.

    I got the tickets earlier today and I'm glad I did. When I got to the theater there was a line down the block for people waiting to get in. The last time I had to wait in a line outside the theater to get into a movie was when I saw Return of the Jedi in '83. So that part of it was pretty cool.

    There really isn't that much new information in the movie, unless all you watch for news is the local news at 11 pm or something. There certainly wasn't any out and out lies. Some of the ways he spliced the footage together was pretty funny, but I wouldn't call it deceptive. There was nothing in the narration that was false though.

    There was some stuff in the beginning about the 2000 election that was news to me, and painted Democrats in a pretty pathetic light. Plus there were some pretty extreme cases of the government going overboard in the name of homeland security, but again they were more comical than anything.

    There was also some pretty surprising information about how much of our economy the Saudis are in control off. I had never seen that before either. Pretty amazing stuff.

    As far as the movies rating, I can see why it would be R, but there's nothing in there that a teenager couldn't handle. I'd have no problem bringing 14 year olds and up to the movie. Anybody out there now who's thinking of enlisting might want to go see the movie. There's some footage of solders talking about there experience that's pretty sobering.

    All in all I think it was one of Moore's better films. A lot better than Bowling for Columbine. It is an attack on the President. So if you're one of those types who think that we shouldn't be critical of the President during war, you'll hate it. Otherwise though, I think people will enjoy the film.

  15. Re:Truth? by Sanity · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Please don't confuse entertainment with truth.
    The two are not mutually exclusive.

    If you have specific issues with the facts in this film them lets hear them.

  16. I like how Penn of Penn and Teller put it... by DaedalusLogic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In his show bullshit on the Showtime Network, the topic was the overblown emphasis on safety and terrorism in our world today. It was something to the effect of:

    "There will always violence and suffering in the world, and Michael Moore will always be there to make a buck off of it."

    I liked Michael Moore's work in "Roger and Me" and "Bowling for Columbine" made some good points at times. I just do not agree with him on most of his views and I think his personal political conduct has been reprehensible lately. For one, he canceled an interview with Fox News at the last minute. The station is certainly conservative, but shouldn't that mean he should be big enough to stand up and take his case to the other side? Of course he couldn't use any slick editing and he wouldn't be the only one talking, so that might hurt him.

    1. Re:I like how Penn of Penn and Teller put it... by abe+ferlman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "There will always violence and suffering in the world, and Michael Moore will always be there to make a buck off of it."

      Right along with Halliburton, the Carlyle group and their Saudi investors!

      Remember kids, it's not the corporation's fault, it's the whistleblowers who are to blame.

      --
      microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
    2. Re:I like how Penn of Penn and Teller put it... by goon+america · · Score: 5, Interesting
  17. Ok, let's try to be rational by fermion · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The movie is an opinion.

    Of course it presents a specific point of view. It is made by a person taking into account his audience.

    He uses a specific set of fact patterns. Other people use other sets of fact patterns. Be an intelligent person and try to get a wide variety of fact patterns before you decide what you will consider the most likely truth. If anyone believe that any single source is going to use an objective set of fact patterns, then that person is naive beyond any help.

    And please, don't confuse the office of the President with the person holding the office. Confusing the two, and inducing confusion of the two, is the first step to a dictatorship. The former is an institution. The later is a person who was elected to guard that institution. The former is something that must be protected. The later is someone who should be willing to give his reputation and life to protect and serve. This means that criticizing the person is not treason. Sometimes that person needs to be criticized. Sometimes that person is a liar. Sometimes that person is sex addict. Sometimes, for example, that person is drug addict, and we know the TV has told us that drug addicts support terrorists.

    So, no hitting below the belt. No calling people traitors for exercising constitutionally protected free speech. As we used to say, if you don't like it, go to Russia. Or, in other words, if you can't take the heat, get you wussy ass out of the kitchen. So no invoking war scenarios for a war that congress never declared. And remember, all sides are torturing humans, and everyone loves their kids equally.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  18. Re:AMAZING mov[i]e by xxdinkxx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    sorry, never post before being awake(corrected text): My wife and I saw this movie two days ago at 11 am, and I was floored by it for the rest of that day, the following day, today, and probably will be for a good while. This movie really shouldn't be seen just as a "we hate bush movie" although many will interpret it as that. Rather it's more along the lines of here is _all_ the corruption ( on the oil side of the equation... no mention of drug money) that goes on in our lovely government, even under other admins ( yes iirc clinton's admin wasn't made to look very good either...though to be fair, wasn't demonized like the bushes (and shouldn't be for that matter) ). I must add that while everything is the movie has been checked, I found it interesting that he really didn't try to make the democrats look all that much better then the republicans.. the feel I got was that republicans and saudi(es) are evil and the democrats are clueless-- and not there when you need them... in the best case senario. This move is not for the light hearted, but everyone should see it (as it will be the source of much controversy). I can see why this movie was a winner of the canies award. Regardless of if one thinks that Michael Moore is a crackpot or not, the actual footage speeks for its self ( and in some cases quiet amusingly (if that's a word) so).

  19. Re:Uh there's a reason for that by squaretorus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can't see how this comes even close to News for Nerds,

    I have to disagree - that a DOCUMENTARY (admittedly an sensationalist entertainment led documentary) is opening on so many screens in intellectual backwater that is mainstream US multiplex is pretty damn good news for the nerdy populace!

    This is a fact / interpretation of facts based movie, with a relatively minor distributor, beating 'the man' to an extent by even being released.

    If some shit Mangaporn going to DVD is news, then Im sure as hell that a major documentary opening is. That said - if the /. editors could come up with a more refined presentation of the article - ie give it some POINT - we'd be discussing the movie, the distribution, the SOMETHING instead of just discussing wether this is okay to discuss!

  20. Re:Extreme views by Egonis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whoa, EXTREME Leftist???

    On a political scale within the United States, although it may not appear that way to American Citizens, all parties are on the far right as compared with other nations.

    We Canadians have a Liberal Government, literally named, far beyond the left Americans consider acceptable in their political campgains, etc... yet, we have an extreme leftist party called the NDP -- it's a matter of perspective.

    I think that Michael Moore takes his own reality, and the facts to back it up to make his point... it's not to say that he fabricates anything, but it's all about how the information is presented, and in his case... 'left-wing' for Americans. Like any editorial, documentary, etc, it's all about how the viewer perceives the information.

  21. Re:Farenheit 911 by Sanity · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm sure there are exaggerations and perhaps outright lies in the movie
    Why would you assume that? This is one of the most fact-checked movie in history, it had to be or the right wing would have the perfect excuse to dismiss it as lies. I haven't heard a single criticism of the facts it states that hasn't been effectively rebutted by Moore.
  22. Re:Extreme views by fredrikj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Extreme left-wing? Wouldn't that be revolutionary communism? Moore is more accurately characterized as a social democrat.

  23. Parent is an Idiot. by KrisHolland · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "this is not the place to discuss it"

    The film is classified as a documentary. Who sees documentaries, kids? No. Nerds do.

  24. Re:Moore's history of dishonesty by torpor · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Like it or not though, many people are just not intellectually up to the challenge of dealing with Cato Institute, or any of the other instruments of social introspection that may allow commoners to understand the issues with the American coup d'etat currently under way.

    Michael Moore is a pop-culture 'documentarist'/'entertainer'. If you want to wake up the masses, don't give them countless reams of reports and articles to attempt to wade through. Save that for the courts.

    Remember, America is not the most literate nation on Earth.

    Many peoples literary skills stop at the ability to change the channel whenever they see something on TV they don't understand.

    While it may be 'popular' to counter the Michael Moore marketing machine with elite intellectual discourse on the condition of the American Empire, most MTV-riddled minds are not up to the task. They just aren't. 50 years of Television programming have brainwashed the American public beyond caring about it if they can't understand it.

    Michael Moores' delivery methods serve a very key, very important, very significant demographic.

    A very, very important demographic: those who are unable, or unwilling, to peer behind the curtain and try and work out what is going on with their society, while those who are intellectually, corporately, and politically able, engage in nefarious deeds.

    Michael Moore, for all his failings (and yes, he does have quite a few), will get to the common man ... where Cato Institute will not.

    If you truly believe that an understanding of the nature of the conspiracy against American society is important, you won't discount the actual value of Moore's level of work.

    It is just as vital to reach the proles as it is the intellectuals...

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  25. Re:Moore's history of dishonesty by Willard+B.+Trophy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cato receives funding from the oil industry, and had Fox News head honcho Rupert Murdoch as a director. Now that's what I call fair and balanced reporting!

  26. Re:Truth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Lies? Like what? Name one lie in Fahrenheit 9/11. Just one, that's all I ask. You can blame the movie for being biased. You can blame it for being a poor source to form an opinion from since it only gives one side. You can blame it for sensationalism and a number of other things. But I don't think you can claim it contains lies.

  27. We have a free market of ideas in this country... by crashnbur · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...and that includes the right not to have a film shown if the theatre managers don't want to show it, for whatever reason they choose. It's the same right that allows a newspaper editor not to run a story no matter who wrote it, or allows a newscaster not to air an interview or clip no matter what was said or who said it.

    Bias exists in many shapes and forms. Twisting ideas into idealogical talking points is just one, but the most popular (and most people don't even realize it) is leaving out any thing that's true that supports the opposite claim. For instance, Michael Moore has consistently insisted that at least a significant portion of his film is satire and not meant to be taken seriously, but he won't tell us which parts or what makes them untrue. Meanwhile, there are supposedly "intelligent" people in this forum posting comments about how "true" the movie is when they obviously have little to know real knowledge of what comes across the desks and goes through the minds of either Moore or the president.

    It doesn't matter which side of the fence any of these people are on. What makes me sick is their incessant whining about rights and truths when neither group understands what they are.

  28. Real research? by gorbachev · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a fundamental problem in US politics. It's that there are only 2 parties.

    Everything and anything is always black or white.

    There is never anything that even remotely resembles honest exchange of ideas on the Senate or House floors, never mind the White House, because things are run through majority politics.

    If Republicans rule, they steamroll their ideology down everyone's throat at all costs. If democrats rule, they'll do the same.

    The same polarity on political issues is so prelevant on all mass media that you just can not get any independent research on any issues from any source, foreign sources excluded (BBC tends to be kinda ok, most of the time).

    While we are on this subject, I find it extremely dishonest of George W. Bush to have claimed in his election campaign that he would unite the American people. The damn fool has done no such thing. Americans are more divided now than ever.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  29. Response to Hitchens by Sanity · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a pretty good response to this article here. Not sure if Moore himself has responded yet.

    1. Re:Response to Hitchens by jefgodesky · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I was going to let this lie, but there's just too much FUD in here.

      Salis, are you a historian? I am the erstwhile editor of an electronic historical periodical on post-Roman Britain; I am preparing to relaunch it in the coming months as a peer-reviewed journal. I have presented at academic conferences. I don't just read history obsessively, I actually practice the craft. And while my knowledge of WW2 is not as great as other periods, I know what a consensus means and how it's formed. I didn't claim there was one yet on FDR's pre-knowledge of Pearl Harbor; I said one was forming. Primarily from younger historians who are working solely from primary sources, and lack the hero-worship of the G.I. Generation. I don't know if it's true or not, but there is plenty of evidence to suggest it.

      I addressed Hitchens' main point. His primary thesis is a straw man argument: that Moore's actual opinion does not gel with the opinion Hitchens would like to project on Bizarro Moore from the parallel dimension where things happened differently. Hitchens projects onto more policies and answers that Moore does not give. Moore asks questions; Hitchens sticks answers in his mouth and then points to how contradictory the answers he supplies for Moore are.

      I said Moore's treatment of pre-war Iraq was suspect. However, is your contention that no child in Iraq ever flew a kite? Saddam was a heinous mass murderer, but no dictator, no matter how cruel, can be oppressing everyone all the time. Saddam was very nice to the Sunnis, for example. Most of Saddam's genocide was committed in the 1980s and 1990s, and while the terror of the Fedayeen cast a pall over all Iraqi life, the sun still shined on Baghdad during the day, and there were still far more moments of peace than of strife. In every country on earth, no matter how despotic, most people are just trying to get by.

      You need to do a lot more reading on Al Jazeera. They are hated in the Arab world for being pro-American. Only in America are they considered propaganda for terrorists; most of the world considers them the opposite. This says something about journalistic integrity and objectivity when both sides hate you.

      Moore's three Bush-esque sentences were highly suspect. The shootings at planes patrolling the no-fly zone, however, is the strongest argument against their literal truth. Whether these constitute an "attack on America," i.e., an act of war, is debatable. I do not take either side of that debate, and I find those three sentences very misleading. But, like Bush's claims of ties between al-Qaida and Saddam, they are literally true. It's a very fine line of deception that Moore walks for three lines like a highwire.

      That it's better to get Saddam before he gets WMD's is a very different (and much better) case than the argument that he had WMD's. You should definately be working for the White House, Salis; you're much smarter than they are!

      I don't like Saddam, and I take his removal as the silver lining of this situation; a situation that has plunged Iraq into chaos and threatens to tear the region apart in horrific civil war, has strengthened al-Qaida more than they could have ever imagined, and begun the neoconservative campaign for the Pax Americana (a cause they have outlined publicly in detail many times). It may have doubled the size and power of al-Qaida and planted the seeds of a new Roman Empire, but it did get rid of Saddam. There is at least that. But with other tyrants far worse than him at large, I take little consolation in that.

      I nowhere insult Hitchens. I did not lower myself to the logical fallacy of the ad hominem, especially as so much of my argument relied on pointing out the logical fallacies in Hitchens' argument. I challenge you to cite a single, solitary line in my rebuttal where I insulted Hitchens. I made many pointed remarks about the weakness of his argument, but I never commented on the man himself except to put to bed the contention that this was a "lib fight

      --
      Jason Godesky
  30. Re:Truth? by Algan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While your comments are probably true, please note that they pertain to Bowling for Columbine. Do you have any such remarks related to the subject of our discussion, which is Fahrenheit 9/11? If so, I guess we'd all be glad to hear them.

    Anyway, it's obvious that F9/11 is not a balanced documentary, in fact it doesn't even claim to be. It is a film with a very specific agenda, that is to make Bush loose the elections. In that regard it is more of an op-ed piece than a documentary. However, Moore claims that all the facts presented in the movie were double checked and he's ready to stand by them even in court if necessary.

    --
    If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?
  31. Holocaust revisionists can make the same claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because your details are largely factually correct does not make the whole true.
    Just leave out relevant facts,take things out of context and contiuosly draw an opinion not supporeted by the facts you have presented.

  32. Re:Dishonest by jd142 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do people think that a documentary must be a completely objective, facts only movie? Some of the greatest documentaries in film and print have been made from a social or political motive. Silent Spring and The Jungle spring to mind. Even something as seemingly innocuous as the Cousteau documentaries on sea life had an agenda.

    The problem is that in dealing with social events, presenting events with no spin at all makes the report virtually worthless. Take these hoary old examples:

    1) 10 men killed 100 men.
    2) 10 patriots successfully defeated a horde of barbarous invaders, killing 100 of them.
    3) We regret to report that 100 freedom fighters were killed by government thugs today. 10 members of the government's death squad brutally murdered 100 loyalists.

    All three of those statements are true and they all describe the same event. But the most purely objective tells us nothing about what really happened.

  33. Re:Won't change any minds... by mc6809e · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Republican Party has figured out that they can buy votes from the uneducated.

    Well, in a democracy, you get votes by giving people money. Isn't that why the Democrats were successful for so many years? Aren't all those social programs simply ways to buy votes?

  34. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by dago · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "For instance, Michael Moore has consistently insisted that at least a significant portion of his film is satire and not meant to be taken seriously, but he won't tell us which parts or what makes them untrue. "

    Which means that you have to think for yourself and search where is the truth in what you've been told ! What a disgussing concept !

    --
    #include "coucou.h"
  35. Moore's history of honesty by gubachwa · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Skimmed through some of the links above to know they're nothing more than lies. Example:

    From the http://www.politicalusa.com/columnists/schlussel/s chlussel_014.htm link:

    He stages an event at North Country Bank and Trust in Michigan's Traverse City, claiming that opening an account would entitle one to walk out of the bank with a gun in hand. The film shows him doing just that. But the key word is "staged." In reality, the bank does not provide guns for opening accounts, and you can't walk in or out of the bank with one--unless you're a security guard employed by the bank. The gun is one of several "giveaways" that can be chosen by customers in exchange for opening a CD account. In order to qualify for the gun, customers must open a 3-year CD with at least $5,000 and then must pass a background check for the gun, which can only be picked up at a licensed gun dealer.
    See How to Deal with the Lies and the Lying Liars When They Lie about "Bowling for Columbine". He addresses the above criticism about half-way down:
    So, how crazy are the things they've said about "Bowling for Columbine?" Here are my favorites: "That scene where you got the gun in the bank was staged!"

    Well of course it was staged! It's a movie! We built the "bank" as a set and then I hired actors to play the bank tellers and the manager and we got a toy gun from the prop department and then I wrote some really cool dialogue for me and them to say! Pretty neat, huh?

    Or...

    The Truth: In the spring of 2001, I saw a real ad in a real newspaper in Michigan announcing a real promotion that this real bank had where they would give you a gun (as your up-front interest) for opening up a Certificate of Deposit account. They promoted this in publications all over the country - "More Bang for Your Buck!"

    There was news coverage of this bank giving away guns, long before I even shot the scene there. The Chicago Sun Times wrote about how the bank would "hand you a gun" with the purchase of a CD. Those are the precise words used by a bank employee in the film.

    When you see me going in to the bank and walking out with my new gun in "Bowling for Columbine" - that is exactly as it happened. Nothing was done out of the ordinary other than to phone ahead and ask permission to let me bring a camera in to film me opening up my account. I walked into that bank in northern Michigan for the first time ever on that day in June 2001, and, with cameras rolling, gave the bank teller $1,000 - and opened up a 20-year CD account. After you see me filling out the required federal forms ("How do you spell Caucasian?") - which I am filling out here for the first time - the bank manager faxed it to the bank's main office for them to do the background check. The bank is a licensed federal arms dealer and thus can have guns on the premises and do the instant background checks (the ATF's Federal Firearms database--which includes all federally approved gun dealers--lists North Country Bank with Federal Firearms License #4-38-153-01-5C-39922).

    Within 10 minutes, the "OK" came through from the firearms background check agency and, 5 minutes later, just as you see it in the film, they handed me a Weatherby Mark V Magnum rifle.

  36. opinion from a canadian by VoiceOfRaisin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    first off the film is incredible. the theatre here showing it was selling out every showing, including the matinees, something ive never seen. at the end the audience gave some nice loud applause.

    its always odd as an "outsider" to watch americans. anyone that speaks out about the government is branded a radical, an extremist. round here in canada this is absolutely normal, the evening news has all sorts of people saying all sorts of critiques about the government and its not odd for people to talk about it on the street. and its not a group of people that do, EVERYONE does. no one looks at you funny, no one says you are anti-canadian. a term that is not used at all, either is unpatriotic. this is a states thing, its used to shut you up, make you feel bad. its wrong. moore isnt an extremist, he is a hero. exposing truths is patriotic. dont listen to the shills that call you names. the amount of brainwashing you poor people get is also astounding. i dont claim to live in some perfect society but its night and day with some things and i hope this movie wakes up many people to reality.

  37. Re:Truth? by div_2n · · Score: 5, Informative

    While there is a bit of this movie that isn't really informational and is meant to appeal to emotion, there are some VERY disturbing pieces of infomration given:

    -21 members of the Bin Laden family were flown out of the country on special chartered flights on September 13 while all other flights were grounded. They were NEVER questioned on Osama at all and there is no clear reason why they were given free flight out without interrogation.

    -Prior to the war in Afghanistan, there were plans on the board to put in a gas pipeline through the country. Members of the Taliban visited Texas regarding the issue. The project was abandoned after the US bombed Afghanistan in 1999. After the recent war, Hamid Karzai was made the leader. The papers were signed giving the green light for the pipline. Prior to being the leader, Karzai was a consultant for one of the companies trying to build the pipeline.

    -Prior to 9/11, Bush had been on vacation over 40 percent of his time in office. During one of those vacations, he was given a security brief that outlined Osama bin Laden training his agents to fly planes in the US as tools of terror. Condi Rice talked about that memo in some of the investigations. Nothing was done about it.

    -Pre 9/11, many Bush administration officials are ON THE RECORD as saying that Saddam Hussein didn't have any weapons of mass destruction nor was he capable and wasn't a threat. AFTER 9/11, their tune was exactly opposite. Why?

    -Condi Rice is on camera saying "There is a definite connection between Iraq and 9/11." We now know that isn't true.

    There are many more points he made that I think MUST be addressed by the Bush administration. If they cannot dispute them, then in my opinion any person with one ounce of thought ability should never consider voting for him.

  38. Re:Dishonest by pyros · · Score: 4, Insightful

    IT's called editorial spin. Every reporter does it, every journalistic media in the history of human communication has done it, and it will always be done. The thing is, he openly admits he uses editing to suit his agenda. He has, on television, said of this film "no, I'm not fair. I have an opinion. The facts are true, but they presented to support my opinion." I don't know about you, but I think somebody who will admit that up front carries more credibility than someone who staunchly sticks to the same rhetoric which has been proven false, rather than admit having made a mistake (and yes, I'm talking about almost the entire Bush administration).

  39. Re:Extreme views by Moridineas · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's simply not true, and is perhaps a sympton of the relativism (moral and otherwise) that pervades "liberal" thought today.

    For one thing, if you insist on classifying the entire world as left/right you miss a huge degree of differences. What's the difference in right/left terms between hitler, stalin, mao, and gandhi? Probably not as much as you think. Not to mention that right and left mean very different things in Britain (where I *believe* the terms originated) mainland Europe and America. Not to mention, Republicans wouldn't even fit in with most Right wing parties in Europe, many of which aren't classicaly liberal at all. Besides which, saying America is far-right is pretty ridiculous. We may not be as bad a social state as mainland Europe, but it's only a matter of degree.

    question, where do the classical liberals fall? The Austrian economists? Popular Swiss ideology? Norwegians? What about Nationalist socialist parties?

    Making the US to be some extreme right wing country is nuts.

    sorry for rambling.

  40. Sports writer says: ... most powerful movie ... by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not just the fact that Michael Eisner of Disney did not want Disney to distribute the film. Fahrenheit 9/11 won the highest prize, the Palm D'Or, at the recent Cannes competition! It is only the second documentary in history to do so. The film received the longest standing ovation in the history of the Cannes festival!

    This story in Fahrenheit 9/11 is relevant to Slashdot because the situation is far worse than Michael Moore says. I put together links to 2 other movies and 35 books that say there is an extremely serious problem: Unprecedented Corruption: A guide to conflict of interest in the U.S. government. Slashdotted? Try:
    http://www.hevanet.com/peace/usgovcorruption.htm. Michael Moore is reporting things EVERY Slashdot reader and every person in the world needs to know. It they get their way, you WILL become poorer.

    People like the movie because they like the movie! Fahrenheit 9/11 is selling out everywhere. Today in the Sports [!] section of the Kansas City Star is an example. The writer, Jason Whitlock, says:

    "Fahrenheit is the most powerful movie I've ever seen. Not even Moore's heavy-handed, pro-Democrat slant could undermine his indictment of Bush's reaction to 9/11. The movie appears to have struck a chord with American moviegoers. I spent all Friday afternoon and evening driving from North Carolina theater to North Carolina theater trying to see the movie. The showings were all sold out. I snagged one of the last tickets to a mid-day Saturday showing."

    Judging from the stories, other reactions in the U.S. are even more enthusiastic than this. A theater with 10 screens in Portland, Oregon scheduled 18 showings for today, Sunday, June 27, 2004, in reaction to the movie's popularity on Friday and Saturday.

    (Reading the Kansas City Star commentary, 'Fahrenheit' powerful, persuasive, requires free registration. Be wary, the company says it will send you email, so you might give a trash email address, or use a free trash email address at Mailinator.com or DodgeIt.com. Judging from the registration information, if you give a real postal mail address, they may send you unwanted mail, also.)

    The movie is breaking all-time theater records all over the United States.

    1. Re:Sports writer says: ... most powerful movie ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You know, technically, there were more americans than any other nationality in the jury...

      Quentin TARANTINO, USA (president of Jury)
      Benoît POELVOORDE, Belgium
      Edwidge DANTICAT, USA
      Emmanuelle BEART, France
      Jerry SCHATZBERG, USA
      Kathleen TURNER, USA
      Peter VON BAGH, Finland
      Tilda SWINTON, UK
      Tsui HARK, Vietnam

      Basically, 44.4% of the jury was of american origin (55.5% if you include the brit) while 11.1% was french. As such, your argument that the film won a prize because it was a French film festival holds no ground.

    2. Re:Sports writer says: ... most powerful movie ... by madfgurtbn · · Score: 4, Informative

      No it's not. It only drew in about $8 million on Friday night.

      Which made it in one single day of wide release the 5th highest grossing documentary in history.

      As of now on boxofficemojo.com, F911 is showing $16M gross for two days, which now brings it up to 2nd highest grossing documentary in history.

      This movie will certainly now gain much wider release than the 868 theatres in which it is showing now. F911 has a very wide release for a documentary, but the nearest showings are a two hour drive for me.

      Will it still be in the theater after a couple or three weeks? I doubt it.

      Are you seriously that self-deluded that you think F911 is going to just go away?

      I sincerely hope you go to see the movie. Sounds like you could use a reality check.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money. Dad, get me out of this.
    3. Re:Sports writer says: ... most powerful movie ... by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While there's a plurality of Americans on the jury, the fact that they're on the jury of the French film festival gives pretty good odds they're Francophiles, and are far from the Americans who are off eating "freedom toast" for breakfast and switching to Californian wine.

      Right... they're at Cannes because they're Francophiles and not because it's the most prominent film festival in the world.

      -a

    4. Re:Sports writer says: ... most powerful movie ... by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If F911 goes on to be proven to be a propogandistic screed, it will without doubt place the Cannes Film Festival in the same league as the Nobel Peace Prize and the United Nations: institutions which soiled their reputations in order to pursue a political agenda.

      Cite a factual error or gross oversimplification of the facts in 9/11. Cite how the Peace Prize and UN have been perverted by politics anymore than the GOP or the corporate dominated media. You accuse these institutions, run by fallable humans, without citing anything as damning as ignoring a real threat to the country to pursue an ideologically driven war against a hypothetical threat.

      I am willing to accept mistakes, I am unwilling to accept incompetence and irresponsibility.

      National defense information and work product was given to China in the 90s in exchange for campaign cash from the People's Liberation Army under Clinton's watch is acceptable behavior?

      I don't think Bush's former business relationships are in the same league as this matter but Mike Moore wants you to believe that conducting legitimate business prior to taking office which is not approved of by Michael Moore is not; and Moore wants you to believe that Rich White Men(tm) have it in for democracy. Well, if that is true, then at the top of the list is Michael Moore and his films.


      Where does Moore, or anyone else for that matter, come out and say that Mr. Chung or Mr. Ghandi should not have been indicted or tried? I don't remember anyone from the DNC doing anything other than returning any questionable funds, which totalled less than $500,000 out of $1 Billion in contributions for the 1996 campaign season. Ethics charges have been filed in the House against Tom DeLay (R-Texas) for campaign contribution violations. Rep. Nick Smith (R-Mich) alleges that he was promised $100,000 for his son's campaign by the RNC and threatened with marginalization if he refused to vote yes on the Medicare bill in Nov '03. Moore doesn't attribute this to Bush or his Administration directly, why do you attribute problems with the DNC fund raising arm with the Clinton Administration?

      The Bush administration have shown little leadership when dealing with the Israelis or Saudis. They have been more concerned with Iraq than the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, they have faltered in pressuring real reform in Saudi Arabia. This could have been accomplished by securing Israeli concessions in the West Bank and Gaza. Clinton was much closer to securing some peace there, which most experts on the area (both Arab and Western) agree that the issue is the number one recruiting/fund-raising poster for real terrorists.

      Readers should also consider what the Bush administration has done to protect the USA from further attack from terrorists and what Mike Moore has done. One element has taken pro-active and solid steps for our nations security, the other is like a yelping 300 pound chihuahua, complaining loudly about what Bush did, all the while failing to offer what he should have done.

      It may not happen this year but I feel certain that F911 along with 'Bowling for Columbine' will be shown to be propoganda films, not documentaries, and the awards presented to them will be forever stained with this stigma.


      Moore is simply stating that the emporer has no clothes. If you would like to state that the emporer has clothes, then you will need to back that up. Moore has claimed that his facts have all been vetted. Either point out ones that haven't or counter them with your own. Distracting the discussion with motive, or trying to discredit the ideas with guilt by association does not accomplish anything. I personally think that Moore falls into that trap sometimes in an attempt to reach a less informed audience, but you fail to even point out where he makes logical errors or overly-speculative arguments. And Moore has talked enourmously about how all of these things should have been handled. He refers to a lot of other policy wonks who actuall

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  41. Re:Dishonest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    and here is a rebuttal to Hardy Law.

  42. Fahrenheit 9/11: A Conservative Critique by usurper_ii · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Fahrenheit 9/11: A Conservative Critique
    by William Norman Grigg

    I just returned from viewing Fahrenheit 9/11 here in Appleton, WI. I went to the 1:30 PM showing, which was - astonishingly - sold out. The crowd was overwhelmingly white and middle-class (this IS Wisconsin, remember), ranging in age from early teens to retirees. The people were polite, friendly, well-mannered (something we shouldn't take for granted on the part of contemporary theater crowds). There was tumultuous applause at the end, punctuated by a moment of reflective silence as we read the dedication card invoking those murdered by terrorists on 9/11, and those murdered through state terrorism in the aftermath.

    The film itself very much reflects its creator: It's shaggy, flabby, occasionally witty, and frequently infuriating. It will have a HUGE impact because Moore - his facile leftist economics notwithstanding - has nailed his case against the Bush regime flush to the plank. It will be all but impossible for anybody who sits still and watches this film to view Bush the Lesser as anything other than a petty, spiteful, dim-witted, bloody-handed little fool - and the figurehead of a murderous power elite. This explains why the Bu'ushists are threatening to go Abu Ghraib on Moore: They're busted.

    The most powerful moments in the film are those that humanize U.S. troops, several of whom are shown on-screen criticizing the regime. A major arc of the film is devoted to a Flint, Michigan housewife from a military family whose son, just prior to being killed in Iraq, wrote a letter condemning "George 'I wanna be like my Daddy' Bush" for staging this useless, unjust war. Moore himself, who narrates the film (and makes himself too much a part of the story, incidentally) observes that the largest immorality of this entire enterprise is the actions of a dishonest president lying our country into war and forcing decent young men (and women) to do immoral things.

    It should be pointed out as well that the film - despite being lambasted as an exercise in unalloyed Bush-bashing - doesn't spare Democrats who acquiesced in Bush the Lesser's power grabs and his criminal war against Iraq. Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle comes off particularly poorly, which in his case merely requires a recording device of some kind.

    An interesting encounter immediately after seeing the film underscores its fundamentally non-partisan nature. Some poor schlep had positioned himself outside the theater with a clipboard soliciting signatures on a nominating position for a would-be Democrat congressional candidate. A couple of people seized the petition and started to sign. Impertinent sort that I am, I asked, "What's this fellow's position on the war?"

    The scribbling stopped, and several sets of eyes focused intently on the hapless volunteer. "Well, um, ah, he thinks we should do something," he began, stammeringly. "Ah, he just thinks we should be more careful." On hearing this, a lady looked at her husband, who had signed the petition, and snapped, "Scratch off your name." I told the volunteer that I'm what most people would regard as an "ultra-conservative - not just a `conservative' - but if your guy came out against the war I'd vote for him, and knock on doors." "Well, I can't really address all the details of his positions," the increasingly flustered guy responded. "Just let him know what I said," I suggested, telling him that there are a lot of people who have the same point of view.

    I chatted with several other people as they left the theater, all of them roughly my age (early 40s) and of similar economic and cultural background. Each of them indicated that he or she would urge friends to see the film - which means that it will have "legs" even if the GOP and FEC were to choke off advertising somehow.

    There were no screaming Bolsheviks (one viewer had an anti-animal rights T-shirt) or marijuana-scented bohemians in the crowd. This wasn't the sort of crowd you'd see at a Phish concert, or storming McDonald's at an an

    1. Re:Fahrenheit 9/11: A Conservative Critique by usurper_ii · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The night before last, the Independent Film Channel played a 30-minute press conference with Michael Moore that he gave at the Cannes Film Festival. I was really impressed with what he had to say and I think the movie might be worth watching. Rather than being just about Bush, he spent a lot of time talking about how Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11 (a.k.a. the truth) and how public opinion was manipulated to stir up support for the war. I'm kind of wanting to see it, surprisingly. The reviews are already in:

      IMDB User Comments: Michael Moore is a traitor to his country

      I had a lot of driving to do at work the last couple of days and listened to a lot of WBAP 820. There was a lot of talk about Fahrenheit 9/11 and Michael Moore. Every single bit of it was venomous and hate filled. From Rush to Hannity, to every single person on there, there is no way to support our troops while attacking their mission or their commander in chief. And if you happen to do so, you are considered a traitor to the country.

      It's so weird because on every other topic, I usually agree with the majority of what these guys have to say. But they make me so mad on the war issue that I feel like some kind of left-wing liberal. I was actually wanting to e-mail them all yesterday and give them a piece of my mind, but decided not to because they would probably turn me in to home land security.

      One thing I will say, though, Rush was out and Walter Williams took his place for the day. I still like him.

      Usurper_ii

  43. Re:Dishonest by Bri3D · · Score: 5, Informative

    OK... He claimed Bush let some Bin Laden family members out of the country during the air lockdown. This is not true. They were clearly let out of the country after the air restrictions were lifted. And yes, they are the same Bin Laden family is the infamous Osama belongs to, but just because one family member is evil doesn't have to mean the rest are evil.

    As a side note, the Bin Ladens are a family of oil tycoons, just the people Bush would want to slowly corrupt.

  44. Homeland Security is a Sham by arbour42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was surprised to see how he showed the beautiful coastline of oregon, and pointed out all the people protecting that open space from terrorists sneaking in: 1 lone state policeman, part-time.

    It would have been even better if he went down to southern california, arizona and new mexico and showed the nearly 1 million illegal aliens who sneak into the US each year, and the tons and tons of dope that come in.

    excellent security down there - no terrorists smuggled in, most definitely. no small 2 pound sacks of anthrax smuggled within the tons of dope, enough to kill tens of thousands of people.

    it just shows how homeland security is a sham, just meant to keep an eye on every move the middle class makes, and keep them scared, and not give a real damn about reality

  45. Thanks fot the explanation... by polyp2000 · · Score: 4, Funny

    A spokesman for Lions Gate Films said the company debuted the movie in the two theaters to help build good word-of-mouth -- friend telling friend --

    Are Americans really that stupid as to need an explanation for what the term "Word-of-Mouth" means?

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  46. "Michael Moore Hates America" by linuxwrangler · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I heard an intersting bit on the radio the other day interviewing a guy who is making a movie called "Michael Moore Hates America" which is due out later this year. In it he tries, in Michael Moore style, to interview Moore himself while documenting the errors, and more importantly, the ommissions in Moore's films.

    Check out their links page for plenty of sites by people working to track down inaccuracies in Moore's works and an article about how Ray Bradbury is annoyed that Moore stole the title from his similarly titled book without asking and without returning his calls to Moore.

    --

    ~~~~~~~
    "You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
    1. Re:"Michael Moore Hates America" by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bradbury's complaint is never going to make it to a courtroom. Porn makers for years have titled their films as a play on words against a mainstream Hollywood title... it's not a trademark violation as long as the films are so different that nobody's going to confuse them.

      Nobody's going to get a porn film confused with a Hollywood blockbuster. Nobody's going to get Moore's documentary confused with Bradbury's novel. Case dismissed.

      Bradbury can complain all he wants, but that's about as far as he's going get. Moore may have stolen his title, but he did so in a way that's most certainly legal.

  47. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Truth? It's kind of hard to fake actual recorded video. This film is pure propoganda, but that doesn't mean it is in any way untrue. The mother crying for her dead son is the realest thing I've ever seen in a theater.

    Showing a child flying a kite, and then cutting to the military preparation for the "shock and awe" campaign, that is satire. It is an absurdity that underscores a deeper truth about the human costs of war. (It might also be a parody of that anti-Goldwater commercial).

    His only falsifiable claims have to do with the fact that the Bush family has a cosy relationship with the Saud / Bin Laden family, and that the Bush family and their associates have profited or stand to profit from both wars. Where is the rebuttal to that? Why aren't they pointing out the lies?

  48. Re:Dishonest by jfengel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I saw the film last night, and I noticed numerous dishonest things.

    Before I get modded flamebait, I am not planning to vote for Bush in the fall. I think the war is wrong, that the American people have been duped, and that atrocities have been committed in the name of oil profits. Despite that, I came out of the film angry and feeling that I'd been misled.

    Numerous inciddents bothered me:

    * The list of the "coalition of the willing" mentioned only tiny, irrelvant countries, and skipped over really important ones: England, Spain, Poland, the Netherlands. Yes, we did 90% of the work ourselves, but the film implied that we had absolutely no international support, which is simply not true.

    * The story of the man who mentioned to guys in a gym that he considered Bush a terrorist and found himself speaking to the FBI the following day rang false. Many, many people accuse Bush of being as bad as terrorists. If a call is placed to the FBI telling them that, they ignore it. Did the man's gym companions accuse him of something worse? It seems clear that there is more to the story here. Moore implies that the FBI is cracking down on people who dislike the President, and I don't think he justified that.

    * A man's name was blacked out on one of Bush's army papers. The implication was that this was covering up something evil. But it doesn't appear that the relationship between this man and Bush was a secret, and the paper doesn't imply that they did anything sinister except skip out on their service. I suspect the man's name was blacked out simply because it wasn't relevant: the release concerned Bush's record, not this guy's. The other nasty bits of the relationship between this guy and Bush, like the cozy foreign investments, are irrelevant to this document.

    There were others, but I'd need to go through the movie again, point by point. It's not that I disagree with Moore's overall thesis; in fact, I do believe it. But these things, which I consider dishonest, make me wonder about some of the other points he was making where I don't feel I heard the true story:

    * The bin Laden family claims to have cut off contact with Osama, which makes the Bush family's cozy relationship with the Saudis far less relevant than Moore implies. His refutation in the movie consisted only of a single wedding of Osama's son, and doesn't even state that Osama was in attendance: Osama has many sons if I recall correctly, and being on the run he might not go to the wedding of each one. Moore never said that the son was a terrorist; do we lay the sins of the father at the feet of the son? It's not that I think the relationship between the Bushes and the bin Ladens is savory, but Moore overstated his point, one he spends a lot of time on.

    * He points out that Amnesty International accuses the Saudis of "widespread abuses". I believe that they say the same thing about America.

    * His before-the-war footage of Iraq showed happy, smiling children on playgrounds. It skips the grinding poverty, caused by Saddam's refusal to comply with international orders and his skimming of oil profits. It skips the horrific crimes of which his sons stood accused. It skips the thousands of Kurds, dead from the sort of weapons from which Bush claimed we were protecting ourselves. The weapons do not appear to have existed, and the US should not be in the habit of invading every country whose policies we don't like, but to imply that all was sweetness and light in Iraq before we showed up is dishonest.

    In the end, there wasn't a single Republican in this audience. The film is designed to preach to the converted, not to make a case to the neutral or the opposition. But in my case, I felt that it wasn't just one-sided; I felt I was being manipulated. That makes me want to lean exactly the opposite way of how I'm being pushed. I won't: I consider Bush a greedy fool and a liar. But Moore's movie says he is a monster, and such an accusation requires a higher standard of proof than Moore gave.

  49. Re: A question for conservatives by usurper_ii · · Score: 4, Insightful

    who think there is no way to support our troops yet bash their mission or their command in chief:

    If a person has to support the troops' mission no matter what...were the citizens of Germany just supposed to support Hitler no matter what? Were they supposed to be "patriotic" and support the troops as they rounded up the Jews?

    Now I'm not exactly comparing Bush to Hitler here...but what I'm trying to say is that a person can "not want to see our troops come in harms way" and yet not support the mission they are on. For an intelligent person, what the mission is has to figure into if they support the mission or not. To do otherwise, is a blind flag-waving patriotism that is actually dangerous. A true patriot would ask if the war was a just war and if the war was constitutional. If it is not those things, then it is not unpatriotic to not support it, it is true patriotism.

    Usurper_ii

  50. Re:Define truth. by Sanity · · Score: 5, Insightful
    TRUTH is a non-biased, exhaustive analysis of a topic.
    No, truth is the opposite of lying, which is stating things as facts which aren't true. I have yet to see a single fact in F911 that has been proven false.

    The fact that you think there is any such thing as a non-biased analysis suggests naivity. Everything is biased, the only question is whether you are biased in the same way.

  51. Then you don't know Art. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have no idea what kind of 'artist' you are. But Politics and Religion have been at the heart of Art
    since cavemen were painting their walls.

    Art is an expression of Mans inner and outer landscapes. Both are dominated by Religion and Politics. What you say is patently absurd, or you have no grasp of Art at all.

  52. Re:What out for Michael Moore lawsuits through.... by DragonMagic · · Score: 5, Informative

    Uh, libel isn't protected by the First Amendment and isn't free speech. If someone can truthfully say something bad about the film or Moore, there's little he can do about that.

    However, if someone's going to go out and say that Moore made up the camcorder version of the kids' reading in Florida, or that it happened on another day and Moore spliced it in under lies, that's what I believe Moore is saying is reason for a lawsuit.

    Remember, slander and libel are *NOT* protected free speech in America.

    --

    Human nature is the same everywhere; the modes only are different. -- Earl of Chesterfield
  53. Demographics by fo0bar · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Who sees documentaries, kids? No. Nerds do.

    I saw a 10:30PM show friday; particularly because the 7:40PM (and all previous) shows were sold out. And you know what I noticed?

    Nearly everyone in the theater was aged 18-30, from all walks of life. The exact demographic that the issues in f9/11 affected.

    I was impressed.

  54. Rush Limbaugh... by DrRobert · · Score: 5, Insightful

    does the same things everyday on his show. Conservatives seem absolutely apoplectic about this movie, but I don't understand why. You CAN'T be upset with the things that are said. You MUST be upset with the approach to "news"; the approach is to carefully select issues and facts that may border on truth and then construct them into an argument while leaving out all mention of the other side. If you want to complain about Michael Moore... fine, but complain equally loudly about Rush, Hannity, and O'Reilly (O'Reilly doesn't even belong in this group because he came from Hard Copy and he has been busted by many sources for out right lies). Complain about the approach, complain about the system, but DO NOT complain about the tactics just because someone does not agree with you.

    To add a note of technology to this /. discussion.... A few months ago I read a lot of political book from both sides of the fence. Many of the authors claimed their opposite was simply lying and then "proved" it. I began to do some checking into what kind of information/technology was available for me to examine the any available facts and derive an opinion independent of the talking heads. Most of the online research services and transcript companies that can provide original documents (facts) cost thousands of dollars per month. My conclusion... It is IMPOSSIBLE for a common individual to be properly informed about issues that they must vote on. This is a very sad conclusion because our system of government is founded on the principal that the voting public is educated about the issues.

    So what can open source do to correct the strangle hold that talking heads have on primary information sources?

    1. Re:Rush Limbaugh... by wrecked · · Score: 5, Informative
      I think that your question is extremely relevant. Noam Chomsky, for example, has said that part of the problem with trying to become an informed citizen is that no one has the time to conduct mini research projects on every important topic.

      Regarding open source alternatives to Lexis-Nexis et. al., I think that we're starting to see the emergence of these sources with the Groklaw project. Groklaw right now is confined to a narrow issue, but it publishes primary source material and commentary that is superior to many paid services, and in an open source fashion. It is only possible for Groklaw to do this, however, by focusing on a single issue.

      I hope that we will see more open source political projects like Groklaw in the future for other important issues.

  55. Rush Limbaugh....Michael Moore and others by Danathar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems that both sides...the left and the right seem to have gravitated to the view that the ends justifies the means. If you have lie, cheat, steal, misinform, omit, denigrate, insult amd some say..murder...its OK because your cause is a right and just one.

    I have no doubt that both democrats and republicans both think they have the country's best interest in mind. It seems though, that neither trusts the other enough to sit down at a table to try an understand WHY their opposites think the way they do.

    Instead each side assumes that the other side will do anything it can to undermine them and so...they do the same.

    The result is people like Michael Moore and Rush Limbaugh that would not even consider sitting down with each other because each refuses to believe they would get fair treatment from each other.

    Although many would laugh at me for saying this, but this type of atmosphere can lead over time (decades) to an environment that leads to civil war. NO...that's not going to happen in the U.S. today, but if people are not willing to talk to one another and listen to each other's concerns without the insults, it will eventually.

  56. Are they fighting for our freedom? by usurper_ii · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fighting For Our Freedom?

    One of the things that keeps coming up since our troops have gone into harm's way is that they are fighting for our freedom. If a war supporter is asked about the protesters, invariably, the response is that our soldiers are fighting so that the protesters have the freedom to protest.

    Could this be true? Is it possible that Saddam's six or seven Scud missiles -- which we can't even agree on as to if they were the "permitted" Scuds or the "illegal" Scuds -- could have affected our freedom here in America? To hear it from anyone in the military, every war we have ever fought was for our freedom here in the US.

    Well, was Desert Storm to preserve our freedom? If Saddam had continued to occupy Kuwait after we gave him the green light to take it, would anyone here in America have lost any freedom whatsoever? Well, we might have ended up paying higher prices for gas or -- oh the horror -- been forced to employ Americans to work here in America to pump up American oil.

    Does anyone remember the economy in Texas when oil was a booming industry here? I do, and it was nice. Having jobs to put food on the table and keep a roof over your head...with enough left over to save up for the future or send your kids off to college, that sounds like freedom; and instead of keeping that here in America, we closed down entire towns and exported the jobs to the OPEC nations...the very nations that openly despise us.

    So if Desert Storm wasn't for our freedom, what was it for? When Saddam originally invaded Kuwait, President Bush, Sr., turned to the United Nations, not the U.S. Constitution to which he'd sworn a solemn oath, for authorization for his military moves. He then began to state his goals -- over and over again:

    • September 11, 1990 televised address: "Out of these troubled times, our fifth objective -- a new world order -- can emerge.... We are now in sight of a United Nations that performs as envisioned by its founders."
    • January 7, 1991 interview in U.S. News & World Report : "I think that what's at stake here is the new world order. What's at stake here is whether we can have disputes peacefully resolved in the future by a reinvigorated United Nations."
    • January 9, 1991 Press Conference: "[The Gulf crisis] has to do with a new world order. And that new world order is only going to be enhanced if this newly activated peacekeeping function of the United Nations proves to be effective."
    • January 16, 1991 televised address: "When we are successful, and we will be, we have a real chance at this new world order, an order in which a credible United Nations can use its peacekeeping role to fulfill the promise and vision of the UN's founders."
    • August 1991 National Security Strategy of the United States issued by the White House and personally signed by George Bush: "In the Gulf, we saw the United Nations playing the role dreamed of by it's founders.... I hope history will record that the Gulf crisis was the crucible of the new world order."

    So here it is painfully obvious that just because we went to war, it wasn't to preserve our freedom here in America, but to empower the United Nations. In fact, not only did Desert Storm not have anything to do with our freedom but in all actuality was more so to enslave us than to free us (those employing the term "New World Order" have sought socialism (economic control) and world government (political control) over mankind. This was also the goal of Bush Sr. for our nation and for the world).

    So it is possible for our troops to be in harm's way and it not be for our freedom. And if it is not for our freedom in general but specifically for the "right to protest," legislation is being proposed in Oregon that could make protesting an act of terroris

  57. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by div_2n · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the movie a quote from Donald Rumsfeld in a television interview:

    "We know where the weapons are . . ."

    Really? Why haven't they found them after more than a YEAR of being there.

    A quote from Condi Rice also in the movie from a briefing:

    "There is a definite connection between Iraq and 9/11."

    How interesting. The 9/11 commission just declared none.

    These are facts. Aren't you upset that we have been misled?

  58. Re:Truth? by madfgurtbn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, the tie changes color because Moore splices together different bits and pieces to get Heston to sound like a real villain.

    It's dishonest and it's wrong.


    Here's the "changing tie" claim on bowling for truth (scroll down to the section "Timeline Trickiness").
    http://www.bowlingfortruth.com/bowl ingforcolumbine /scenes/hestonrally1.htm

    You will see a very interesting image, a collage of 3 images from Bowling for Columbine-- Heston in blue tie, a billboard, and Heston in a red tie. These are 3 consecutive images from Bowling for Columbine.

    Ask yourself why is the billboard image cropped so much that it is not readable?

    The billboard as shown in the movie (I'm working from memory here) is an advertisement for the upcoming Denver NRA event at which Heston speaks while wearing the blue tie.

    The grandparent poster claimed, "Charlton Heston's tie changes colour in what is supposedly one speech"

    But, according to bowlingfortruth.com in the movie you are introduced to Charlton Heston with his trademark catchphrase, then you are shown a billboard that says there will be an NRA Annual meeting in Denver, then you are shown a scene from the Heston speech at Denver, where Heston is wearing different clothes, in a different room, with a different backdrop.

    Dishonest how? Wrong why?
    Or are you just picking nits because you cannot find any actual factual errors in the movie?

    I think the bowlingfortruth.com site is the best thing that could have ever happened for F911. That is, it prepared Moore for the nitpicking and distortion that will be done to F911. There isn't a single word in F911 that hasn't been thoroughly researched and verified by a team of fact checkers.

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money. Dad, get me out of this.
  59. I am not American by xutopia · · Score: 5, Interesting
    and I have watched the news in two languages, in 5 countries around the world during the US/British push towards Iraq war. I looked at the news coming from the USA, Canada, England, France, Belgium and Australia as well as many articles from English and French online news sources.

    Michael Moore is bringing to the big screen things that all American news sources ignored while the rest of the world knew perfectly well about it. If anything Moore is showing Americans that they have been duped by the US media. The facts he brings out were commonly seen in the rest of the world except the US. I'm talking about the staged elections, the blacks not being allowed to vote, the false "intelligence", the lacking weapons of mass desctruction, etc...

    If anything Moore balances out the very biased news sources you guys have in the states with a refreshing bit of reality. This war was for oil and weapons money and Ben Laden has more chances of being unearth by France than by the US.

  60. Documentary: "Factual and Objective" by crashnbur · · Score: 4, Insightful
    (Borrowed the idea of the subject from this comment.)

    The American Heritage Dictionary defines "documentary" as A work...presenting political, social, or historical subject matter in a factual and informative manner and often consisting of actual news films or interviews accompanied by narration. Further, it restricts the presentation to "facts" that are presented " objectively without editorializing or inserting fictional matter , as in a book or film."

    According to this definition and Michael Moore's admitting that a significant portion of the documentary is not meant to be taken seriously -- it's only partly true and the rest is meant to be satire, not to mention the lack of objectivity -- then Fahrenheit 9/11 is not a documentary; it is a mockumentary, little more than entertainment with some basis in facts deeply buried beneath the surface of the film (although you wouldn't know it by Moore's presentation) and should be treated as such.

    For reasonably objective, reasonably centered reviews from well-respected news organizations (as well as some considered by many to be "left-wing" publications), click the following links:
    Washington Post -- "Moore has publicly indicated his goal is to impact this election."

    CNN International -- "Of course it isn't a fair and balanced look at its subject matter, but it is good filmmaking."

    The Guardian (UK) -- "According to legend, Fahrenheit 9/11 was made to topple George W Bush and thereby save America from the grip of an evil tyrant."

    New York Times -- "Mixing sober outrage with mischievous humor and blithely trampling the boundary between documentary and demagoguery, Mr. Moore takes wholesale aim at the Bush administration, whose tenure has been distinguished, in his view, by unparalleled and unmitigated arrogance, mendacity and incompetence."

    MTV -- "Are [the facts Moore presents] impenetrable on their own, or are they manicured to fit Moore's own motivations?"
    FYI, I have only read the opening paragraphs to each of these reviews, so I have little to no knowledge of any potential direction they may follow. Click at your whim.
  61. Re:Christopher Hitchens Review by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ok, who modded this down all the way from 5 to -1, Redundant? How can this possibly be redundant? There is no mention of Hitchens or his rebuttal before this post. Was it modded down only because it provided a half-decent rebuttal of Moore's movie? Was it modded down by the same people who cried out (and rightly so) when Republican morons attempted to pressure movie managers into not playing this movie? Seems a bit hypocritical to me...

    Anyways, here's a link to the full article rebutting Moore's movie. I'm curious whether this post will be modded down as well... after all, dissenting viewpoints are dangerous...

    --
    Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
  62. Re:Dishonest by ezra451 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, the majority of bin Laden's did leave the country during the lockdown. Only one family member was evacuated in the weeks following and it was made public almost immediately. He was a student was begining to be harrassed. The issue of course is that none of them including hte last was questioned. What makes this crimial is the fact that the family was still in touch with Osama. The movie talks about this event as the wedding of one of Osama's sons. It didn't go on to quote the poem that the son read regarding the destruction of the USS Cole

    http://www.google.com/search?q=osama+wedding+son +p oem&sourceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf -8&oe=utf-8
    google search.

    The Bin Laden family gained much more of their wealth through construction. They have been the main firm in the service of the Saudi king to build roads and infrastructure. Oil came later and certainly it's no shock that the Bush family would want to continue positive relations with wealthy Saudi elite.

  63. Re:Truth? by grylnsmn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    21 members of the Bin Laden family were flown out of the country on special chartered flights on September 13 while all other flights were grounded. They were NEVER questioned on Osama at all and there is no clear reason why they were given free flight out without interrogation.

    But do you know who authorized that? It wasn't Bush. It was Richard Clarke, the same man who Moore has praised for his comments about Bush's handling of 9/11 and Iraq. Clarke has publicly taken sole responsibility for the flight.

    However, in the film, Moore tried to portray Bush as being responsible for it.

    Having seen the film, the part that disgusted me the most what when Moore kept making a big deal about Bush's connections to the bin Laden family and making it seem as if that meant that Bush was connected to Osama. Osama was disowned by his family a long time ago.

    I once dated the niece of Teb Bundy (the serial killer). Does that mean that I supported his actions? Not at all. Does it mean that she supported his actions, just because they were related? Again, not at all.

    I consider a lie to be any statement made with the intent to decieve. That includes outright falsehoods, half-truths, or even the full truth told in a manner to make a personl believe otherwise. Moore's biggest form of lie is in what he ommits, not in what he explicitly says.

  64. Double spin example. Bin Laden and Saudi flights by weave · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Moore spin: Highest levels of government made arrangements to get the Saudis out of the country on 9/13 when no other regularly scheduled flights were in the air.

    Conservative spin: Moore is lying, the airspace was re-opened on 9/13.

    Truth: The airspace was opened on 9/13. No airlines were able to get regularly scheduled flights into service that day because they were all grounded in "the wrong places". That day was spent shuffling empty planes back and forth between airports to get ready to start back up. That process took a few days. On 9/14 most flights were still canceled (I had a flight canceled that day too). The U.S. government most likely assisted the Saudis to charter planes to get them out the moment airspace was opened, and could have been the subject of that meeting Bush had with the Saudi ambassador that day, but that's just speculation.

    Moore didn't lie, but he could be accused of deceiving trying to make people think the Saudis were in the air when airspace was closed. The conservative response deceives as well, trying to paint a picture that everything was back to normal on 9/13. It wasn't.

    People need to learn to read between the lines and think for themselves. If you're conservative and you think only liberals spin to deceive and not conservatives, you're a fool -- and visa-versa.

  65. Re:Angering and Heartbreaking by presarioD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What is sad about Micaels's Moore movie is that it tries to complement the heavily missing work of the "new's media" in US.
    A guy has to make a movie in order for the americans to be informed what the rest of the world already knows... about America!

    Another point that doesn't settle right is that somehow if Bush and Co. doesn't get reelected everything will be just fine!

    Excuse me but it was Bill Clinton that ordered a similar bombing campaign against Yugoslavia some years ago. The same international laws were broken then as well. Only many more nations had interests at stake then, so the joyfully backed up that endeavor.

    The truth can be only one and most of the times it is very painful. I am amazed how people focus on the details (whether Moore makes money or not, if he is biased, if he twists the truth) when it comes to an action out of the norm (making a documentary about a current political situation), when they completely surrender to the corporate bias for example of Fox News or The NY Times.

    Never understood that, I guess never will. I watched the movie and kept a close ear to the reaction of the fellow people around me. This is the first time after the Vietnam War that the American public gets an exposure of its true self, the aggrandazing bubble of benevolence was almost shattered when that Iraqi woman was wailing on camera!

    Powerful pictures, powerful reactions. It is so sad and unfortunate that only the loss of a dear one (your serving son) can be a potent wake-up call to the reality around you...

    --
    Yam, yam, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade
  66. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by crashnbur · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, that's obvious. The problem is that so many liberals are failing to do that; they're simply praising the film as truth (which is what I said in my last post) despite that Moore has admitted that it is not all true.

    Also, when Moore says the film is a documentary and it is not, and when he makes it clear that his intention with this mockumentary is to hurt the president's chance of re-election, then what he has done by disguising his own biased opinions and even some intentionally hidden satirical mistruths in the film is, as you say, a disgusting concept.

  67. It's not just a USA issue. by jupiter909 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I see people keep saying 'our' country. I'm not from the USA and I've never been there and neither have many other /.'ers , but this I can say, whatever happens there with regards to mass political moves there does affect us in smaller countrys.

    Many of the problems we could face tomorrow would be a direct result of Bush and friends. They tend to have 'something' agaist other races/cultures.

    Politics does cross over to 'geekland' when it starts passing laws on patents/privacy and other arb laws that effect us on the other side of the pond.

    The USA != The known world.

  68. How we see America from Europe by Surgeon606 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most people here in Europe think that Americans only worry about themselves and are unaware of what happens outside their country. I'm not telling that is true or false, but that is the image people have from them.

    There has been a _lot_ of censorship on the American media in this second Iraq war. This has been criticized very much around here, but I don't know if Americans are aware of that, and if they access uncensored information by reading international press or simply blogs.

    Unfortunately, anti-americanism is growing up all over the world, not only in muslim countries, and this is very worrying. I think you (and us, of course) should try to see things from the different points of view that people have outside the US.

  69. Re:What Nader said... by The+Ape+With+No+Name · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Michael Moore is now the Democrat's Leni Riefenstahl.

    First, consider the source. Ralph's ego is so big it get's 2 zip codes. He's just jealous because he is not the focus of Moore's approbrium. Of course, he wouldn't be. Moore is not a member of the Democratic Party. I think he is an independent who voted for, guess who, Nader.

    Second, consider this statement:

    "Mel Gibson is the Right's Leni Riefenstahl."

    If you know anything about Leni Riefenstahl, you would see that the latter is more accurate esp. in terms of Fascistic imagery and personal "I'm a martyr" protestations. Did you see the movie "The Patriot?" Did you know that the British DID NOT commit the atrocities depicted in the film? Of course not.

    Also, notice I say "the Right." Democrats are not leftists unless the US suddenly has become the Fundamentalist Theocratic Police State that so few (but so powerful) want. Wait for it....

    --
    Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
  70. The problem... by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 5, Interesting
    is that in the US, the executive leader is also the head of state.

    In most countries, the head of state and the executive leader are two different people. The President or Monarch is the one who gets your loyality and respect, but he's just a figurehead with relatively little influence over the day to day running of the country.

    The Prime Minister, on the other hand, is the one with all the power, but who doesn't feel entitled to any loyalty or automatic respect on account of his position. In fact, the Prime Minister has to withstand a barrage of criticism on a constant basis from the opposition. This is very healthy since it keeps the government on its toes.

    Can you imagine G W Bush having to go through a weekly American equivalent of Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons? That would be entertaining!

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:The problem... by willis · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Can you imagine G W Bush having to go through a weekly American equivalent of Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons? That would be entertaining!

      That would be fantastic. I lived in England for some time, and I used to LOVE Prime Minister's Questions -- especially during the lead up to the war in Iraq. If Bush couldn't even testify alone or in public for the 9/11 commission, he'd just melt with President's Questions...
      --

      there is no thing
      what else could you want?
  71. Re:Dishonest by jd142 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No, because humans want and need to know more about what's going on than just bare facts. Facts with no context aren't helpful. Saying that 10 men killed 100 men has no context. Why did they kill them? Who were the killers, who were the dead?

    Here's another example:

    10 men killed 100 men. The same 10 men drove into town.

    10 men killed 100 men. The killers drove into town.

    10 US soldiers killed 100 men. The killers drove into town.

    Suddenly the word killer in the third example takes on a different meaning. Are "our boys" killers? Of course not! But "killers" is certainly an objective word in the second sentences. Because in the third example, assuming you're an American who supports our troops and I'm not claiming I am, by giving us more accurate information about the people who killed, suddenly a purely objective word in the second sentence takes on a negative connotation. People generally don't like the word "killer" applied to someone they support.

    Think about how Fox news and CNN differ in their reporting of people who set off a bomb to specifically kill other people and purposely die in the act. CNN calls them "suicide bombers" indicating that they are people who kill others and commit suicide at the same time. Fox calls them homicide bombers, which I think is less accurate because it does not indicate that the bomber was committing suicide on purpose in the process.

    But both descriptions tell us more about what happened then "an individual set off a bomb and purposefully died". Because we know that the words "suicide bomber" and "homicide bomber" have a particular political bias, and that knowledge gives us more information, not only about what happened but about the people presenting the news.

    Everything else, while interesting to a human who can have a 'viewpoint' or stance, is irrelevant.

    Hardly irrelevant when humans are the ones parsing the events and reacting to them. What you say may very well true in an academic discussion, but we're talking about the real world. We need to know more information to put it into context.

    There are more elaborate examples than the suicide bomber/homicide bomber distinction. For example, what do you call the island approximately 120 miles southeast of China? Do you call it Taiwan or do you call it the Republic of China? The name you choose tells us about your politics. Or if you were doing an article about it would you refer to it as "That Island off the Coast of China" to avoid the various human viewpoints? http://www.worldpress.org/Asia/1671.cfm has more information about the name change.

  72. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by rjung2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And yet, no one has yet to find a single cinematic documentary that didn't espouse a particular view.

  73. Re:Dishonest by kalidasa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The list of the "coalition of the willing" mentioned only tiny, irrelvant countries, and skipped over really important ones: England, Spain, Poland, the Netherlands. Yes, we did 90% of the work ourselves, but the film implied that we had absolutely no international support, which is simply not true.

    You missed the Netherlands. Remember the guy lighting up the bong? That was his reference to the Netherlands (yes, the name of the Netherlands was displayed, too). The Netherlands have 1,300 troops in Iraq, making them one of the larger contingents.

    Moore didn't bother to mention England, Poland, or Spain because the administration has mentioned them dozens of times. His point was that the grand coalition numbers of countries included a number of countries who actually had nothing to contribute but lip service.

    My own criticism is that he ridiculed some of the people in these countries with his choice of images. The Amsterdam pot-head was probably the LEAST insulting of the images he chose.

    The story of the man who mentioned to guys in a gym that he considered Bush a terrorist and found himself speaking to the FBI the following day rang false. Many, many people accuse Bush of being as bad as terrorists. If a call is placed to the FBI telling them that, they ignore it. Did the man's gym companions accuse him of something worse? It seems clear that there is more to the story here. Moore implies that the FBI is cracking down on people who dislike the President, and I don't think he justified that.

    I don't think you quite understood this. The point was not that the FBI was as a whole cracking down on dissent; it was that the USA Patriot act gives the FBI and other law enforcement agencies the ability to crack down on dissent if they so chose. I think the idea was that this particular FBI office was playing Stasi because they could - not that the entire FBI was out to stop dissent.

    A man's name was blacked out on one of Bush's army papers. The implication was that this was covering up something evil. But it doesn't appear that the relationship between this man and Bush was a secret, and the paper doesn't imply that they did anything sinister except skip out on their service. I suspect the man's name was blacked out simply because it wasn't relevant: the release concerned Bush's record, not this guy's. The other nasty bits of the relationship between this guy and Bush, like the cozy foreign investments, are irrelevant to this document.

    Not at all. Let's keep in mind - the man's name was not blacked out when Moore got the documents in 2000. They were when he got the documents in 2003. Why? The fellow was a foreign investment advisor for the Bin Laden family, who is listed in the documents as having skipped out on a medical exam at the same time Bush did (the two paragraphs, one on Bush's failure to be examined, one on this guy's failure to be examined, were in sequence). The fellow also invested some money HIMSELF in Bush's own oil drilling company. The implication is that the Administration deliberately censored the document after 9/11 because the fellow was someone investing Bin Laden money who invested his own money in Bush, suggesting the possibility that perhaps Bin Laden money was behind Bush's first oil drilling company. This was of a piece with the point that Bandar has a Secret Service protection squad (which is not normal for Ambassadors), and that one of the Bin Ladens was at a meeting of the Carlyle board with GHW Bush on September 10, 2001, and that the arrangement to spirit the Bin Ladens out of the country when all other passenger flights were grounded did not allow the Bin Ladens to be questioned by the FBI regarding possible financial ties with Osama Bin Laden.

    There were others, but I'd need to go through the movie again, point by point. It's not that I disagree with Moore's overall thesis; in fact, I do believe it. But these things, which I consider dishonest, make me wonder about some of the other points he was maki

  74. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by HunterD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ya know. I'm sick and tired of the "leaving information out" argument against Michael Moore. When is the last time *you* made an argument and you brought mentioned every last possible fact that could harm your argument? When a person makes anargument, it *is not their responsibility to make the counter argument*. It is the responsibility of the opposing party in the argument. Arguments have always been constructed with the set of facts that support your hypothesis - you have aproblem with moore, you are always free to produce facts that undermine his argument - something you can't do with outright liars.

    Beyond that, look at the right. Ann Coulier clearly and repeatedly lies outright in her books. In many casses her attributions are ourtight fabrications. Yet no one says a damn thing about her. Look at Rush. The man also lies on a repeated and regular basis. The chorus of silence criticizing him is deafening. The same goes for almost all of the crackpot commentators on the right like Michael Savage and even Bill O'Reilly. These people have a political agenda, and have no concern for the truth whatsoever.

    Compare this to Michael Moore who at least has facts to back up his claims. Does he make the counterargument against himself? No. Is that his job? No.

    I'm just sick of the hipocracy in this country that hold the left to a *much much* higher standard then the right. Progressives can't make tiny mistakes without being torn apart by the wolves, yet the right gets free reign to do and say anythign they want and essentially recieve no accountability for their actions.

    All you have to look at to see this is a man who has suggested life imprisonment for drug offenders, and I believe at least once executions who turned out to be a drug abuser himself - and *nothing* happened to him. Rush Limbaugh.

    SO if you are going to throw your stones at the left, you might want to watch out for your conservative glass house first.

    --
    - The unexamined life is not worth leading -
  75. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by RevAaron · · Score: 5, Funny

    A damn shame, huh? It's a good thing we conservatives do naught *but* tell the truth! And if, for some wild reason, we don't always stick to the facts (unheard of!), we always make sure to point out where our lies are.

    Thank God for the Bible! It's kept GWB II the most honest guy there is, even after the White House was tainted with the evil liberal lies of the previous 8 years! Imagine all of the lies that W could be telling- but we can be sure he never does thanks to that little black Book.

    Praise Jesus!

    --

    Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  76. Re:They won't have to try next time... by papercut2a · · Score: 5, Interesting

    he Carlyle Group, which has rather extensive ties to the Bush Family/Administration and the Bin Ladens

    I guess you didn't read your own link. According to the Wikipedia article, it also has ties to many prominent Democrats, including leftist money-man George Soros and the daughter of Madeline Albright. The same Wikipedia article says the bin Ladins sold their stake in the company two years ago.

  77. Please provide a link to this alleged fact by DavidinAla · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've followed this story quite closely, and I have NEVER seen any person from Disney say such a thing. So please provide a link or direct quote with a source for it. I do not believe this is accurate, but if it is, I'd like to know it.

    You SEEM to be parroting the party line of the Michael Moore crowd on this issue. I tend to think it's more of an effort by Disney not to be involved in something that was going to be highly controversial and potentially spawn new calls from conservative to boycott the company. Think about it. If he had wanted to KILL the film, he could have. Disney owned the piece. It could have been stuck in a vault for no one to see. He simply didn't want Disney involved in the distrubution, for legitimate business reasons.

    Just for the record, I don't like the Bush administration, but I also don't like Michael Moore's tendency to play fast and loose with the facts, either. This seems to be a case in which his supporters are alleging something with no basis in fact, just as Moore has shown a repeated tendency to do in his films. Even if you agree with Moore's conclusions about things, his arguments are greatly weakened by his willingness to lie and mislead his audience about details.

    1. Re:Please provide a link to this alleged fact by Emperor+Shaddam+IV · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ok, you asked for it:

      http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F 40 B13FA35590C768CDDAC0894DC404482

      Also, if you don't want to register:

      http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/Movies/06/02/fil m. moore.reut/

      Or
      http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2004/05/289 086.sh tml

      Dude, it was all over the national news for weeks. It DID happen and Disney DID refuse to distribute the film...

  78. WRONG! by GI+Jones · · Score: 4, Informative
    -21 members of the Bin Laden family were flown out of the country on special chartered flights on September 13 while all other flights were grounded. They were NEVER questioned on Osama at all and there is no clear reason why they were given free flight out without interrogation.

    This is a point that I am tired of correcting people on. This did not happen as you are lead to believe in the movie. On September 13th commercial flights had already resumed, but private flights were still restricted. Permission came, not from the President, but from Richard Clarke who was a hold-over from the Clinton White House and not a Bush puppet. 22 of the 26 people that were on that flight WERE, in fact, interviewed and cleared by the FBI prior to leaving.

    http://articles.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m12 82/is_18_55/ai_109411350

    The funniest thing about this, is that everyone who watches the movie leaves with the same wrong impression: that while all other airplanes are stuck on the ground, the bin Ladins are give special permission from the President to be the only plane flying. The fact is, that this is a clear case of spin-doctoring. It is common in politics. This is a way of saying TRUE things, but leading people to specific conclusion that may not be accurate. Moore is a master of this kind of work.

    Don't get me wrong, I like Moore's work, but at respect him as an Artist... not as a champion of truth.

    Bush may have a relationship with the bin Ladin family, but when you are lead to believe that the bin Ladins were given special treatment because of that relationship, it can piss people off. However, this never happened. It is clear that Bush cannot be blamed for the bin Ladin family and Saudi nationals leaving the country... if you know the facts, it just cannot be substantiated; but Moore, knowing the facts, misleads his film-goers.

    I'm not saying don't see the movie. I think everyone should see the movie. Moore has crafted a relevant, entertaining movie. But it IS a commercial movie, and commercial movies are made in order to make money. So, go out an enjoy the film, just don't trust everything you think you hear. Double-check the facts before assuming that your conclusions are correct.

    - just my $0.02

    --
    "Perhaps most amazingly, votaries of 'diversity' insist on absolute conformity." -- Tony Snow
  79. Re:What out for Michael Moore lawsuits through.... by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a very interesting social comment you have unwittingly made against yourself. You have not yet seen, you imply, any "clear, concise, and truthful rebuttal" to Moore's film. You hope someone makes one soon. However, you have already decided we are being "manipulated, misled, and lied to."

    That's really interesting to me. In the absence of evidence against Moore's film, you assume it is misleading and untruthful. That's just not rational.

  80. Re:Dishonest by Anonymous+Writer · · Score: 4, Funny

    and here is a picture of a chicken.

  81. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by HunterD · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the interests of dialog, I'll try to respond to this when I get back (I have a wedding to go to), but I believe this article is deeply flawed. An example I can whip out real quickly: The person who wrote the article states that the 9/11 commission found that the bin ladens left the country after the airspace had been re-opened. This is a VERY deceptive statement. on September 13th, the air space had been re-opened, but no passengers were allowed to fly until sept 14th. Sept 13th was used to reshuffle the airplanes back to where they should be so that flights could resume the 14th.

    No passengers were allowed, *except* for these special charter flights that took the Bin Ladens and the Saudi royalists out of the country.

    Hitchens then states that Clark allowed these flights - and thus Moore is a liar.

    Well, these saudis were allowed to fly befor anyone else, were not questioned, and were allowed to do so by a member of the Bush administration (Clark was indeed a member of the bush administration, or do you dispute that fact as well). Not one iota of this contradicts Moore and Ferenheit 9/11.

    Once again, Moore uses facts, while the talking heads on the right jsut say wheever they want to, so long as it's consistant with their idology - facts be damned.

    I'll try to reply more to it when I get back from the wedding.

    --
    - The unexamined life is not worth leading -
  82. Give me a break... by whitroth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Go google on images from Vietnam, that were played on the six o'clock news. Try the famous picture of the girl on fire with napalm, that was plastered everywhere.

    This is what war *IS*. Blood and death and shattered bodies: this is the real world, not some video game or "action movie". You are, as the citizen of a democracy, *SUPPOSED* to vote on things - and I refer to Bush, Cheney, Rummy et al, as "things" - that affect the real world. If you voted for them, you voted for *this*.

    Too real for you? Want to live in a fantasy, and keep your kids in a fantasy?

    My kids have to live in the real world, as I do.

    No 'R' rating.

    mark

  83. Re:Please mod parent as TROLL by div_2n · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We've found ten or twelve Sarin and Mustard rounds

    That is such a small amount that hardly justifies the action taken. It is also not clear when or how those entered Iraq.

    The way the Bush administration talked it up, there was just tons and tons of such weapons laying around. Hmmmm . . .

    There were connections between al- Qaida and Saddam Hussein's government.

    I never said this wasn't true. There is no connection with Iraq and 9/11. Period. The 9/11 commission was very clear on that point.

    To date, there has not been an effort by the Bush administration to truly justify this war. They have just quipped sound bytes here and there. There were two reasons they tried to harp on to go to war:

    1) Iraq had tons and tons of WMD in their possession and

    2) Iraq was somehow INVOLVED with 9/11.

    So far, neither arguments have held any water. After that became clear, the arguments then became, "Well, he was such a bad person anyway we have done the world a favor."

    This war wasn't justified for the reasons it was started. The real question is were these the real reasons for war or was it more about oil and money as Moore and many many others suspect?

  84. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  85. You seem to be missing the point by DavidinAla · · Score: 4, Informative

    The poster to which I replied made the following claim: "Michael Eisner is quoted in the press as saying that he didn't want to risk having certain tax benefit revoked...." I challenged the truth of that statement. None of the replies to me so far have even remotely supported the poster's original statement, and none of the links you provided have any link from Eisner saying any such thing, so what you're saying is not responsive to what I said.

    1. Re:You seem to be missing the point by Emperor+Shaddam+IV · · Score: 4, Informative

      Fair enough, its Eisner's word against Michael Moores Agent. http://feed.proteinos.com/001952.html

      But CEO's are the most realible sources. Anyway, Disney refusing to distribute the movie is kind of odd, don't you think? Especially since most of their movies have been bombs lately. But in any case, it was said in a private conversation between Eisner and Ari Emanuel so we will probably never know the truth.

  86. My Pet Goat by sg3000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    > What would have happened differently had the man jumped
    > up out of his seat screamed out "HOLY SHIT KIDS, WE'RE
    > GOING TO FUCKING DIE!" and then run out of the room?

    I love how some people would like to believe that Bush had only two options: sit there are read "My Pet Goat" or get up screaming his head off that everyone was going to die.

    The fact is before the event started, Bush was told that a plane crashed into the World Trade Center. Bush, not 6 weeks earlier had been given a briefing called "Bin Laden Determined to Attack in the United States". Bin Laden had also tried to destroy the World Trade Center in 1993. Bush also knew by this time that Bin Laden was behind the U.S.S. Cole attack. I would hope that the man who is in charge of protecting our country would have thought, "I'm going to delay this photo op, since this might be serious." But, hey, maybe that's too much to ask.

    So Bush sits down. Kids start reading. Bush is told a second plane crashes. At this point, a leader would tell the kids, "Keep up the good work reading. Thank you for inviting me today, but I'm being called away -- 'president stuff'," and he would have walked out.

    There is absolutely every reason to believe that Bush was needed at the beginning of this. Bush is the only person who could give the order to scramble military jets to shoot down civilian aircraft if necessary. It was later determined that Cheney gave this order and no proof could be made that Cheney checked with Bush first, although he claimed the order came from Bush.

    What does Bush do instead? He sits there. Eyes looking around. Then he picks up the "My Pet Goat" book. He reads the damn thing. He sits there for close to 10 minutes. I read his reaction as Bush waiting for someone to tell him what to do.

    I hope the book was worth it.

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    1. Re:My Pet Goat by tmortn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Hindsight is 20/20.

      The events of that day were shocking, unprecedented and went against all experience with terrorist hijacking attempts.

      NOBODY knew what was going on.

      NOBODY claimed responsibility for the attacks.

      NOBODY knew if it was accidental or intentional. Granted the second plane seriously reduced the possibility of accident and the Pentagon clinched it. But Don't forget somewhere in there a plane crashed in a field as well and nobody was real sure what had happend there. As clear as it all has become now, it was confusing as hell when it happend.

      Given the complete unreal nature of the whole event I do not find finishing the reading of a very short book to a class to be an unreasonable action.

      It wasn't a carpet bombing of Washington or some other american target.

      It was not a claimed terrorist action.

      It was not a WMD attack.

      What would those 10 minutes have bought? Even with 20/20 hindsight I want to know if someone can come up with something he specifically could have done that would have changed the course of events from the time he was first informed of the second plane that would have altered the events of that day.

      As far as endangering the kids goes? He and consequently they were about as well protected as could be from any kind of conventional attack. Even from an airspace invasion there is generally a hot set of air cover in the air or ready to go wherever the president is. If the military complex could not have acted to prevent a kamikazi run on the president once they knew it was a possibility ( ie the second plane and pentagon strikes ) then it is severely lacking.

      However for a second lets assume there was indeed a plane with his name on it and they knew he would be at that school at that time etc.... What would his leaving have done besides save his skin anyway ? Or do you really think the terrorists could really have adapted those plans in real time had his location changed? Whatever increased level of deffense from all air attacks there was could be inacted just as well at that location as at any other so the kids where in no greater danger than they had already been placed in having the POTUS visit their school in the first place. Either the plane could have been intercepted or not... and whehter or not he was there would have been a moot point because the likely hood of them altering the target had he left would have been remote at best.

      Your pet peeve is that there were only two extreme reactions. My pet peeve is questioning the reaction in light of what was learned well after those 10 minutes instead of considering it from the level of utter confusion of those 10 minutes.

      Not saying you didn't. All in all I think you have made one of the more reasoned responses I have seen. I just wanted to throw another interpretation out there.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
  87. Re:We have a free market of ideas in this country. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    how evil my country's leaders are
    They are.

    how worthy of the world's hate my country is
    It's not.

    how stupid we are as Americans
    Some are, although I'd say some are ignorant of the damage being inflicted to the US by Bush.

    You are confusing the fact that the US is a country founded on the Constitution guaranteeing freedom and justice for all with select people. The US population is certainly as diverse as anything in the world. That also means there are many opinions out there, ranging from extreme left to extreme right. That makes your country as a whole unworthy of hate. In fact, there is much to be admired of the US. However, your leader is certainly a lying hateful corrupt person and a puppet to the neo-cons. Take it personally if you want, but I don't see the fluke of an election is the result of the "stupidity" of the Americans and worthy of being offended by it. What would be stupid is to re-elect the guy who supports the destruction of the environment (for $$), puts the country in deeper debt than any presidents in the US history (for $$), jeopardizes the education for children (for $$), supports the export of jobs outside the US for ($$) etc. etc.. Hey, that is your country... if you hate it so much, by all means, re-elect Bush.

  88. PNAC by DrugCheese · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No one has mentioned the PNAC in any of this. Established in the spring of 1997, the Project for the New American Century is a non-profit, educational organization whose goal is to promote American global leadership. Read their manifesto, it states in plain english that in order for a one world government (read the US) to happen the American people would have to be shocked into it, with someling like a 'new Pearl Harbor'. Look at some of the names of people belonging to this organization(terrorist group).

    This is real.

    --
    *DrugCheese rants*
  89. Re:Define truth. by sheldon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Moore made no attempt at being balanced

    Either does Fox News, but they claim to be "Fair and Balanced".

    I don't understand this. Why is this barrier only placed for liberal opinion?

    Moore has never claimed to be balanced, he wears his bias on his sleeve. He doesn't deny that, why is this a complaint of yours?

    I mean come on, what does Moore have to worry about, if bush is as bad as he wants everyone to believe, he could have been fair and balanced and everyone would have reacted the same way? Right? Right?

    We'll let the people decide. They've been subjected to one side of the story by the mainstream media. Now they can see the other side from indy film producer Michael Moore.

    They get their choice in November.

  90. My Take on 9/11 by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, I'd like to confess that I'm somewhat of a Michael Moore fan. I've enjoyed his books and movies ever since Roger and Me, I've went to a booksigning of his just to meet him and get a signed book, and I made it a point to see Fahrenheit 9/11 on the first day it was out.

    That said, I tend to look at most things, Moore's movies included, with a critical eye. The biggest problems I have with this movie are not with its content, but the way the content will be recieved. Moore has created an extremely powerful movie, but will it meet its goal of persuading people to change their minds about Bush or the war against terrorism? I really don't think so, and I'll explain why.

    The crowd at the theater had already made up their minds about Bush. The movies main points - Bush was elected unfairly, Bush is an idiot who didn't know what to do for seven minutes after the second plane hit the tower, Bush diverted attention to creating a war against Iraq as soon as possible, and that he lied to the American people - were all applauded loudly by the crowd inside. Moore used an extreme amount of artistic licence and left out many facts to make his point, and the audience lapped up his viewpoint without question. This was not an audience that needed any additional persuading not to vote for Bush. Perhaps conservatives are seeing the movie in other theaters or waiting until the lines die down. But I didn't see them or hear any of them at the showing I attended.

    The thing is, people who are still on the fence about who to vote for this November are likely to be those who need to understand both sides of the story. This movie deliberately sidesteps anything that could be used to question its points of view. Anyone who needs to see a different viewpoint about the things in Moore's movie will have to look elsewhere. When they do, it will become immediately apparent how Moore deliberately avoided lots of obvious things to make the points he did.

    For instance, the movie states that with any possible recount, Gore would have been re-elected. That's a rather narrow viewpoint, because with both the recount the Supreme Court stopped and with the recount Gore wanted, Gore still would have lost. What Moore meant, but didn't say was that with any possible statewide recount with a certain arbitrary standard applied uniformly, Gore would have come out ahead. But we are made to believe that the Supreme Court stopped a process that would have resulted in a Gore presidency. Not true.

    Richard Clarke appears in this movie where he states the Bush administration too quickly focused on Iraq, which weakened our war with Al-Qaeda. The movie also makes you believe that Bush was behind getting the Bin Laden's family out of the U.S. before the general ban on flight was lifted. What it doesn't say is that the flights didn't begin until the ban was lifted - and the authorization to get the Bin Ladens out of the country was made by Clarke himself.

    Anyone wanting to dig a little will have no problem finding out that Moore was against taking action against Afghanistan when we did. But one of this movie's main points was that we didn't go after Osama hard enough and fast enough.

    Moore portrays Iraq before we bombed it as an idyllic place, with children playing in the streets and happy citizens going about their business. This at the very least ignores the basic facts about Sadaam's murderous regime. For someone who really wanted to examine the facts, they could easily find out that more people were killed and maimed each year under Sadaam's regime than under the occupation. But this is opposite of the impression we get from this movie.

    That's not to say this movie didn't score any points with this skeptical viewer. The scene of the contractors convention designed to teach people how to profit from the war turned my stomach. Watching the blank stare on Bush's face after he was told about the second plane made me seriously wonder about his competence. And I hadn't realized the extent the

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

  91. Bush paralyzed for 7 minutes after 2nd plane hit? by jayveekay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we discuss one fact from the movie for a second?

    Is it true that for 7 minutes after Bush was told that the second plane hit the WTC, he continued to read to elementary schoolkids?

    This came one month after he had received a briefing entitled "Bin Ladin determined to attack in US" which described how Al Qaeda operatives were in the US planning to hijack planes, and 8 years after an earlier attack on the WTC.

    It would seem that the President, Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. military, would not want to waste 7 minutes before taking steps to organize defenses (such as issuing orders to defend against other airliner attacks, which were the sole responsibility of the president under rules in place at the time).

    Has GW ever gone on the record explaining what he was doing for those 7 minutes? Did the 9/11 commission ask him about it?

    I had never heard about that fact before this film. My first impression was that it made GW look like a clueless moron who had no idea what to do. It's as if he can't think on his feet, he needs someone to tell him what to do.

  92. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by RobinH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Moore showcases the left-wing pessimism that's eating its way through the Democratic party by telling people in the U.K. and Canada that we're a bunch of obnoxious idiots.

    I'm Canadian, and having spent a lot of time in the U.S., I knew you were "a bunch of obnoxious idiots" long before I ever heard about Michael Moore. Not all of you are obnoxious idiots, but Bush and Moore are two of the biggest. Moore is quite funny though, and I appreciate humour.

    --
    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
  93. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    In other words, preaching to the choir. Hell, he thinks Kerry isn't left-wing ENOUGH. The guy is the Ann Coulter of the extreme left.

    Do any other non-Americans find this as hilarious as I do ?

  94. Re:Bush paralyzed for 7 minutes after 2nd plane hi by Kidbro · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is it true that for 7 minutes after Bush was told that the second plane hit the WTC, he continued to read to elementary schoolkids?

    According to the Memory Hole, is is.

  95. Whatever happened to discourse? by StarWynd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It used to be that people of differing opinions could agree to disagree. People could talk about the issues of day with civility and with respect for those with whom they were arguing. Now, the rules seemed to have changed. No longer is there room for intelligent and informed discussion, but only left-wing venom and right-wing drivel. The political landscape of the US is now extemely polarized and the sides keep getting more and more polarized as they fend off the parries of the other.

    It seems that this polarization has been steadily increasing since Reagan left office. And now it has reached a point where the country is nearly evenly divided between conservative and liberal. The liberals who I know have become very much more liberal and the conseravtives much more conservative and each side believes that the other is idiotoic, distorts the facts, lies, and spews venom and vile for political gain. With these views being held by both sides, it's now impossible to even simply debate the issues. It's sad that we have reached such a point where "we" are right and "they" are wrong. I fear where our politcs are heading when there is unwillingness to listen to and a hatred of those with different views.

  96. Wishful thinking by Von+Rex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's funny to see right wingers across the nation use every forum available in a desperate attempt to discredit Moore while at the same time saying "This isn't a movie that's actually going to change anyone's mind, after all." I wonder why they don't just ignore it, then?

  97. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by MilenCent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Michael Moore ungraciously steals from other artists

    What?!

    Look bunky, the title is homage (since in Moore's view the political atmosphere in the United States is approaching that depicted in the book). No matter what Mr. Bradbury says, you can't copyright titles. (I can't believe that man is upset, by the way -- someone must have got to him.) If you could, the available namespace for new creative works would be impossibly cluttered by now. To call naming your movie similarly to another work in order to make a point about similarity ungraciously stealing from another artist is unconscionable.

    But I wouldn't be angry at you, except you made that damnable "limousine liberal" crack. If you think it's possible to get rich off of producing documentaries than you are a schmuck, pardon my Yiddish.

    Moore's comes from a working class background, a fact that's obvious to anyone whose seen Roger & Me and don't give me that crap about it being full of lies. His father and grandfather worked for General Motors. He had to sell his home to get Roger & Me made. Take a look for yourself. It's impossible he got into this business expecting to make boatloads of cash; that he's succeeded at it means he should be lauded, not condemned for the crime of success. If you're a documentary filmmaker who somehow makes money you must have a spark of genius in you, just like Rush Limbaugh must have for proving talk radio to be profitable. (Whether I agree with him is something else -- but Rush did made it work.)

    Conservatives should be lauding his success, but instead they try to prevent people from seeing his movie, all because Moore doesn't agree with them.

  98. Re:Extreme views by XO · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah, the documented link between Osama and Hussein:

    Osama: Can we use your country to build some terrorist training camps?
    Hussein: Go bugger off, you fool!

    end of link.

    Do your homework.

    --
    "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
  99. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by MilenCent · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...everyone should know about Michael Moore's record for twisting facts.

    But also, everyone should be aware of the page in which Moore responds to the people who claim he twisted facts:

    Moore's considerably-less-famous response page.

  100. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by frost22 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Do any other non-Americans find this as hilarious as I do ?

    Ack.

    Those guys should have spent some time with real leftwing radicals. I mean, come on guys, there are places on the world, wehere gun control is whole heartedly supported by the conservatives, and they and the socialists keep overall tax burden far above 50% with a straight face. Where unions as you know them are a state guaranteed right and hold 50%-1 vote on every company board.

    Where the real lefties are so far removed from reality that you ask yourself what universe they come from. Hey, check out Germany's (really) beloved 'Secretary of State/Foreign affairs Secretary' Joschka Fischer, who started his political career personally knowing qiute a few of the 70's Terrorist luminaries, or our somehwat despised "Environment Minister", who not-so-long-ago used to be menmber of a real orthodox communist group ("orthodox" meaning "unconditionally loyal to Moscow" - we used to joke about those Spartakus guys in university that they would open their umbrella as soon as it started to rain in Moscow)

    Oh, and go to France, Britain, Spain, Italy, Greece, you name it - you will find all shades of real socialists and communists there as well.

    As for Europe, Mr. Kerry (like Clinton before him) is a moderate conservative, while Mr Bush would probably grouped with the likes of Haider, LePen and Fini as a borderline extreme right-wing populist (though his habit to name fundamentalist christian ayatollahs to top governement posts is a practice not seen anywhere in Europe these days).
    --
    ...and here I stand, with all my lore, poor fool, no wiser than before.
  101. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most poor rock and roll one hit wonders that make it big and successfull forget were they came from and end up tanking. Even if he was an average poor boy in the beguining doesn't mean he isn't a "limousine liberal" now. As a matter of fact, it apears that he is even less then that and mainly a machine schill for the liberals. It would apear that apeasing them is what really counts to moore in this day and age.

    Success makes alot of people forget who they are/were and often is the failing point that make people who have achived drop back to were they came from. The problem is that this time around they don't like any of it. They dispise the roots that help image them into a person admired and successfull that even you become a fanboy. The grandparrent poster was correctly portraying moore from the perception of us non-fanboy liberals/?/.

  102. Re:yeah, I'll bite... by linuxhansl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And that my friend is exactly why the US won't stay a super power for long.

    It happened to the Greeks, the Romans, to some extend the French, the Spaniards, (heck the Germans too).
    I actually read an article a long time ago in "Scientific America" (I think), putting forth the theory that every super power will eventually vanish, due to complacency and self rightousness and exploitation by a few rich people.

    Just look around you, you can already see it. Kids are already overweight at age of six, sitting in front of the TV all day. People watch their "games", cheering their heroic soldiers while drinking beer. Education is declining. People watch nothing but so called "reality" shows. Typically both spouses have to work now in order to keep a lifestyle that could be supported by only one income just a decade ago. Politics are reduced cheap TV shows (infotainment). All political discussion has been reduced to "Democratic or Republican". Etc, etc, etc. The list goes on and on.
    (All this is of course not limited to the US, but seen in many western countries)

    The US maybe be currently the strongest military power on this planet financed by a $480.000.000.000/Year military budget, at the expense of US citizens (and that is excluding current Afghanistan and Iraq war costs).
    Ironically that does not even seem to be enough to control a little arabic country that has been bled out by over 10 years of economic sanctions.
    And as violence tends to create more violence, it is not even used to keep the american people safe.

    It's all so rediculous, if it wasn't so serious it would be actually funny.

    How long are the american people willing to pay for that (at the expense of education, health care, social security, high long term interest rates, etc, etc)? Right now there's some kind of almost blind patriotism that keeps people on the line, but it can't hide the truth forever.

    Just look at this number again: $480.000.000.000/Year plus currently $200.000.000.000 for Iraq. Does anybody realize how much money that is? Doesn't anybody else think this money could be better spent then using it to essentially piss of the rest of the population of this planet, and especially Muslims?

    In terms of economic output the US is already second in line behind the EU. And BTW George W. was great for the EU, leading to a common mindset to accept less somewhat national independence in order to be able to jointly withstand US interests (at least this is how it is perceived by many).

  103. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by MilenCent · · Score: 4, Informative

    Most poor rock and roll one hit wonders that make it big and successfull forget were they came from and end up tanking.

    Ah, but after Roger & Me, Moore didn't have a lot of success except for the books, until Bowling for Columbine. Canadian Bacon did poorly (I'd say deservedly so), Pets or Meat I've only even seen mentioned in two places (one of which I found today), The Big One just followed Moore's book tour, and T.V. Nation and Awful Truth were not profitable.

    And the thing about Bowling for Columbine, arguably Moore's first really big success since Roger & Me: The movie is not anti-gun.

    It's anti-NRA, it's anti-Charleton Heston, it's (weirdly) anti-Dick Clark, it's anti-nightly news, it's anti-James Nichols, it's anti-atmosphere of fear.

    But it shows that Canada has more guns per capita than the United States, and a much lower gun-related murder rate. If anything, it shows that American paranoia is responsible for that more than guns.

    Bowling for Columbine is arguably Moore's most centered work to date. People who complain about it lying miss the entire point -- none of the supposed lies that I've heard dispute the essential core of the movie.

    It's true that he probably is a little too active in going after Heston, and Dick Clark, but I understand why he did it.

    Even if he was an average poor boy in the beguining doesn't mean he isn't a "limousine liberal" now. As a matter of fact, it apears that he is even less then that and mainly a machine schill for the liberals.

    There are machine shills all over the place. The right's outnumber Moore at least ten-to-one; talk radio and Fox News prove that handily. And I don't think he is one, even then. I'd say that shills don't fall on their face, creatively, as often, but instead stick to safe projects.

    It would apear that apeasing them is what really counts to moore in this day and age.

    Success makes alot of people forget who they are/were and often is the failing point that make people who have achived drop back to were they came from.

    Granted. But until someone shows me otherwise, I will continue thinking well of Moore.

    (Yes, that's a challenge. Someone out there, show me something damning. I want to know where these rumors come from, if there's anything to them.)

    The problem is that this time around they don't like any of it. They dispise the roots that help image them into a person admired and successfull that even you become a fanboy.

    Oh my friend, I know I'm a fanboy. Do a Slashdot search connecting "MilenCent" to "Nintendo" and you'll have all the proof you want of that. I don't dress up as Link for Halloween, mind you....*

    I am not a Michael Moore fanboy however; a fanboy wouldn't complain about Canadian Bacon, The Big One, or the one-note tone of his books. I do admire Bowling for Columbine, however, and I'm looking forward to Farenheit 9/11. I think the man does good work, and whatever flaws they have are a result of his earnestness more than any calculated shill-factor.

    * This comment is part of a blatant bid to get "Michael Moore" connected to "The Legend of Zelda" in Google searches. Rupees! Flint, Michigan! Heart Containers! General Motors! Ganondorf! John Ashcroft!

  104. Sadly, you're right by kaladorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm a Canadian, and I've found the same thing. I know plenty of Yankees (and a few South'ners) and almost uniformly, they've been interesting and worthwhile people. Whereas I don't agree with all of them on all things (some are tea-totallers, which I as a Canadian find bizarre, some are profoundly religious right (but in a quiet non-proselytizing way), some are very much of the 'America right or wrong' crowd...), but they've usually been able to have a sensible discussion of right and wrong and take into account the right of Canada and Canadians to differ with them. And while doing so, none of them have said unpleasant or belittling things about us.

    Contrast this with how many of my allegedly university educated (and college educated) friends look at the Americans - often times the reactions are vitriolic, uncharitable, and reflect only a superficial interface with *actual* Americans, as opposed to some sort of caricature seen on TV or presented in Canadian (opinionated, spin-doctoring, discontent-formenting) media.

    If they're all so smart and well educated, they should be able to 'walk a mile in the other guys shoes' and should know better than to form opinions of a whole body of people by the outliers. And they should know that it makes little sense to form opinions with little data. But this paucity of data seems to lead to very nasty and very mean-spirited opinions.

    Whether we as Canadians should or should not have joined the war in Iraq, whether we should support the war on terror, whether we have serious border issues ourselves with our own intelligence and police agencies reporting fairly significant terrorist planning and fundraising activities within our borders, etc. - all of these things are things that should be calmly discussed and upon which differing points of view can be coped-with. We should still be able to maintain a civil relationships with our US neighbours.

    It is no mark of distinction, no badge of honour, no sign of integrity or eductation to blindly bash those you've never met, to categorize them blankly based on a few noisy mouthpieces, nor to show your own small-hearted nature by vilifying people who have (for the most part) very similar aspirations, lives, and motivations...

    To my mind, this kind of behaviour (especially given the way we open our arms to people the rest of the world over) is just pathetic. We should have our own opinions, but we shouldn't be obnoxious buttheads when it comes to our neighbours in the south.

    Many of my American friends have apologized for the kind of stereo-typical American tourista that you sometimes encounter ("Those are the kind of people that we even wince about... they make us all look bad.") I feel very much that way about Canadians that can't disagree with their American counterparts without resorting to unthoughtful and unflattering epithets, errant classifications, and bilious polemic. This kind of conduct is unjustified and makes me want to disown these boorish clowns... or at least makes me embarassed to admit to being from the same country, which is sad, because I love the place and I took and Oath to defend it... I just wish some of the people would act a bit more like polite, rational adults and less like petulant, self-absorbed, egocentric children....

    --
    -- Mal: "Well they tell you: never hit a man with a closed fist. But it is, on occasion, hilarious."
  105. Bradbury pot to Moore's kettle... by DoctorFrog · · Score: 4, Informative
    No matter what Mr. Bradbury says, you can't copyright titles.

    Oh, I think Ray is aware of this... I Sing The Body Electric was the exact title of a Walt Whitman poem before he appropriated it for his story.

    Off the top of my head, Something Wicked This Way Comes is a Shakespeare quote, while The Golden Apples Of The Sun is a Yeats quote.

    I'm sure there are others, but that should suffice to show that Bradbury knows damn well that it's permissible to reference another's work in a title.

  106. Re:OK, how about... by rjung2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Didn't he say or imply that bin Laden family members left the US while all flights were grounded and without interviews, when in fact they left after flights resumed and they were made available for interviews, with some interviewed and some not?

    No. he says (and shows the departure records to support it) that the Saudis were given priority queueing to be the first ones allowed to leave the country when the FAA finally began resuming flights, on 9/13/01.

    Didn't he make a big deal of Bush et al getting hair/makeup care before public appearances, making them appear vain and shallow?

    No, he simply showed that footage to fill some time during the opening credits. Moore certainly never makes any mention about it in the movie, and you could replace those scenes with frolicking puppies and not alter the movie's points one iota.

    We could go on, but the fact is Moore is vociferous and entertaining, but not terribly talented nor concerned with the truth.

    You're one to talk...

  107. Re:BEFORE the flamewar commences... by itsdave · · Score: 4, Funny

    in the end of the day, no parent can sign their kid up for the military, only you can sign you up for the military. and thats the end of the story.

    missing from the movie is michael moore trying to get john kerry to recruit his kids to join the military and fight in iraq. he did afterall vote to go to iraq didn't he?