Posts Tagged ‘Michael Moore’

PJTC: Whittle Kicks Butt; Klavan Plays Doctor

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

On PJTV, Andrew Klavan explains that you shouldn’t be prejudiced against that “Happy Spot” that showed up on your lung x-ray. See, VL, breast cancer isn’t the only good analogy….


Bill Whittle explains that he disagrees with many of President Obama’s decisions, but: he did the right thing by putting 30,000 troops into Afghanistan.

Then he explains what bone-headed traitors many of Obama’s supporters are, including Chris Matthews, Michael Moore, and especially and most spectacularly Keith Olberman.

If you enjoy watching evil being flayed alive, you will love this broadcast. An amazing invective tour de force.

Pinch Michael Moore

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Michael Moore asks,

Who among us is not at a loss for words?

Not he, of course. Air sickness bag at ready, take a look at an email that appears to be going around:

Who among us is not at a loss for words? Tears pour out. Tears of joy. Tears of relief. A stunning, whopping landslide of hope in a time of deep despair.

In a nation that was founded on genocide and then built on the backs of slaves, it was an unexpected moment, shocking in its simplicity: Barack Obama, a good man, a black man, said he would bring change to Washington, and the majority of the country liked that idea. The racists were present throughout the campaign and in the voting booth. But they are no longer the majority, and we will see their flame of hate fizzle out in our lifetime.

There was another important “first” last night. Never before in our history has an avowed anti-war candidate been elected president during a time of war. I hope President-elect Obama remembers that as he considers expanding the war in Afghanistan. The faith we now have will be lost if he forgets the main issue on which he beat his fellow Dems in the primaries and then a great war hero in the general election: The people of America are tired of war. Sick and tired. And their voice was loud and clear yesterday.

It’s been an inexcusable 44 years since a Democrat running for president has received even just 51% of the vote. That’s because most Americans haven’t really liked the Democrats. They see them as rarely having the guts to get the job done or stand up for the working people they say they support. Well, here’s their chance. It has been handed to them, via the voting public, in the form of a man who is not a party hack, not a set-for-life Beltway bureaucrat. Will he now become one of them, or will he force them to be more like him? We pray for the latter.

But today we celebrate this triumph of decency over personal attack, of peace over war, of intelligence over a belief that Adam and Eve rode around on dinosaurs just 6,000 years ago. What will it be like to have a smart president? Science, banished for eight years, will return. Imagine supporting our country’s greatest minds as they seek to cure illness, discover new forms of energy, and work to save the planet. I know, pinch me.

We may, just possibly, also see a time of refreshing openness, enlightenment and creativity. The arts and the artists will not be seen as the enemy. Perhaps art will be explored in order to discover the greater truths. When FDR was ushered in with his landslide in 1932, what followed was Frank Capra and Preston Sturgis, Woody Guthrie and John Steinbeck, Dorothea Lange and Orson Welles. All week long I have been inundated with media asking me, “gee, Mike, what will you do now that Bush is gone?” Are they kidding? What will it be like to work and create in an environment that nurtures and supports film and the arts, science and invention, and the freedom to be whatever you want to be? Watch a thousand flowers bloom! We’ve entered a new era, and if I could sum up our collective first thought of this new era, it is this: Anything Is Possible.

An African American has been elected President of the United States! Anything is possible! We can wrestle our economy out of the hands of the reckless rich and return it to the people. Anything is possible! Every citizen can be guaranteed health care. Anything is possible! We can stop melting the polar ice caps. Anything is possible! Those who have committed war crimes will be brought to justice. Anything is possible.

We really don’t have much time. There is big work to do. But this is the week for all of us to revel in this great moment. Be humble about it. Do not treat the Republicans in your life the way they have treated you the past eight years. Show them the grace and goodness that Barack Obama exuded throughout the campaign. Though called every name in the book, he refused to lower himself to the gutter and sling the mud back. Can we follow his example? I know, it will be hard.

I want to thank everyone who gave of their time and resources to make this victory happen. It’s been a long road, and huge damage has been done to this great country, not to mention to many of you who have lost your jobs, gone bankrupt from medical bills, or suffered through a loved one being shipped off to Iraq. We will now work to repair this damage, and it won’t be easy.

But what a way to start! Barack Hussein Obama, the 44th President of the United States. Wow. Seriously, wow.

I’d love to pick this apart, line by line, but…I’m at a loss for words.

Movie Review: An American Carol

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

This is a reworking of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, with Michael Moore Malone standing in for Scrooge and the Fourth of July (Which Malone wants to shut down) standing for Christmas.

[Rotten Tomatoes]
[IMDB]

What follows I crossposted (in slightly modified form) over at Curmudgeonly and Skeptical, because I had earllier announced there my intention to go to the evening show specifically to pay full price, to put my money where I stand.

I went to an eight o’clock show. Good crowd at the ‘plex, but almost nobody in this auditorium. The laughs were half-hearted, forced even. The people there wanted to like it, wanted to laugh. We were hungry for the sentiments expressed.

But my god, it was dry and boring.

Unfortunately, it is at best clumsy, heavy handed preaching to the choir. There is nothing, nothing in this film that will explain its position to anyone that doesn’t already agree with it, much less convert them.

The patriotism was cloying. The family values were saccharine. The religious faith was flimsy.

Perhaps worst of all, the stabs at jihadism were clumsily wide of the mark, failing to acknowledge the very sincere fanaticism at work.

Go to the evening show at a big cineplex. Pay the full price. Buy popcorn and soda and hotdogs and candy.

Then watch another movie playing at the same time, because this one, I am very sorry to say, is a dog.

Two out of five stars. Sorry, folks. [scale adjusted for better resolution.]

[update -- additional reviews below the fold. Nobody agrees with me. Hey Hollywood: people are starving for this! Please, please, please, give us more!]

I do want to get this above the fold: By Hollywood standards, Zucker and co. are displaying career courage by daring to make this film.

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