The fact-checking begins

via Instapundit, Christopher Hitchens tears apart Michael Moore's new movie into little pieces:

To describe this film as dishonest and demagogic would almost be to promote those terms to the level of respectability. To describe this film as a piece of crap would be to run the risk of a discourse that would never again rise above the excremental. To describe it as an exercise in facile crowd-pleasing would be too obvious. Fahrenheit 9/11 is a sinister exercise in moral frivolity, crudely disguised as an exercise in seriousness. It is also a spectacle of abject political cowardice masking itself as a demonstration of "dissenting" bravery.

His response to those who say that every documentary has a POV and Moore has his right just like anyone else:

... if you leave out absolutely everything that might give your "narrative" a problem and throw in any old rubbish that might support it, and you don't even care that one bit of that rubbish flatly contradicts the next bit, and you give no chance to those who might differ, then you have betrayed your craft. If you flatter and fawn upon your potential audience, I might add, you are patronizing them and insulting them. By the same token, if I write an article and I quote somebody and for space reasons put in an ellipsis like this (?), I swear on my children that I am not leaving out anything that, if quoted in full, would alter the original meaning or its significance. Those who violate this pact with readers or viewers are to be despised. At no point does Michael Moore make the smallest effort to be objective. At no moment does he pass up the chance of a cheap sneer or a jeer. He pitilessly focuses his camera, for minutes after he should have turned it off, on a distraught and bereaved mother whose grief we have already shared. (But then, this is the guy who thought it so clever and amusing to catch Charlton Heston, in Bowling for Columbine, at the onset of his senile dementia.) Such courage.

I read something a while back that wryly speculated that Moore was actually part of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy since his over the top propaganda and bias has probably done more to energize Republican party members than any single politician. One has to wonder at times ...

June 22, 2004 10:47 AM
2 Comments

even Beaks on AICN tore the film up pretty good, and he's a pretty liberal fella writing for a pretty liberal site.

Pondered by gosey at June 22, 2004 08:01 PM

Moore's legacy of shame goes back even further. In the mid to late 80's he was (briefly) the editor of Mother Jones magazine. The magazine sent writer Paul Berman to Nicaragua to survey the progress of the Sandanistas. Berman discovered that Ortega and co. had more in common with Castro than with Washington, Jefferson and Madison. Moore killed the piece lest he give ammunition to President Reagan.

Pondered by David Gerstman at June 23, 2004 04:40 AM