Marlowe
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 146
- Location
- The Berglund Apartments
I haven't seen Farhenheit 9/11. I probably won't see it.
I've seen parts of two of his other movies, "Bowling For Columbine" and "The Big One" on cable. "The Big One," what I saw of it, was rather amusing. He catches a bunch of corporations and their bigwigs in lies and other unadmirable behaviors as they send their labor overseas and out of the country and reap big profits from the cost savings. I don't recall him saying anything bad about Clinton for signing NAFTA, though.
What I saw of "Bowling For Columbine" looked like pretty much standard-issue anti-2nd-Amendment claptrap to me, so I didn't watch for long.
His style seems to be to try to sucker someone into an interview on false pretenses (see the Charlton Heston interview in "Bowling For Columbine") and then changes the tone of the interview on them, asking loaded questions, and such, provoking them to eject him from their property or some other such negative behavior. He ususally takes that opportunity to make propagandistic proclamations or pose unanswerable rhetorical questions.
I saw him on "The Daily Show" the other night. He was pompously pontificating in his sanctimonious way, with statements like "the majority of the people didn't vote for him," (George W. Bush) and "opinion polls show that most people want gun control" (but he doesn't give specifics). He also contradicted himself, implying that the Bush family is in the pockets of the Ibn Sa'ud (Saudi) family, but then accusing Bush of invading Iraq for its oil. How does a large supply of Iraqi oil benefit the Sa'ud family? It would drive down the price they could get for Saudi Arabian oil.
This (liberal) writer for Slate put it more eloquently in this article:
http://slate.msn.com/id/2102723/
Personally, I haven't much use for the Michael Moores, Rush Limbaughs and their ilk. At best they have a "my mind is made up, don't distract me with the facts" attitude, or worse, they're cynical propaganda-mongers.
I've seen parts of two of his other movies, "Bowling For Columbine" and "The Big One" on cable. "The Big One," what I saw of it, was rather amusing. He catches a bunch of corporations and their bigwigs in lies and other unadmirable behaviors as they send their labor overseas and out of the country and reap big profits from the cost savings. I don't recall him saying anything bad about Clinton for signing NAFTA, though.
What I saw of "Bowling For Columbine" looked like pretty much standard-issue anti-2nd-Amendment claptrap to me, so I didn't watch for long.
His style seems to be to try to sucker someone into an interview on false pretenses (see the Charlton Heston interview in "Bowling For Columbine") and then changes the tone of the interview on them, asking loaded questions, and such, provoking them to eject him from their property or some other such negative behavior. He ususally takes that opportunity to make propagandistic proclamations or pose unanswerable rhetorical questions.
I saw him on "The Daily Show" the other night. He was pompously pontificating in his sanctimonious way, with statements like "the majority of the people didn't vote for him," (George W. Bush) and "opinion polls show that most people want gun control" (but he doesn't give specifics). He also contradicted himself, implying that the Bush family is in the pockets of the Ibn Sa'ud (Saudi) family, but then accusing Bush of invading Iraq for its oil. How does a large supply of Iraqi oil benefit the Sa'ud family? It would drive down the price they could get for Saudi Arabian oil.
This (liberal) writer for Slate put it more eloquently in this article:
http://slate.msn.com/id/2102723/
Personally, I haven't much use for the Michael Moores, Rush Limbaughs and their ilk. At best they have a "my mind is made up, don't distract me with the facts" attitude, or worse, they're cynical propaganda-mongers.