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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (138659)7/2/2004 6:04:07 PM
From: Noel de Leon  Read Replies (3) of 281500
 
Thanks for the reviews of Fahrenheit 9/11. Here is a quote from the second(final paragraph):
"Along with many other polite liberals, I cringed last year when Moore launched into his charmless, pugilistic acceptance speech at the Academy Awards. Oh, how vulgar, I thought—couldn't he at least have been funny? A year later, I think I might have been too hard on the fat prick. Six months before her death in 1965, the great novelist Dawn Powell wrestled in her diary with the unseemliness of political speech during an "artistic" event: "Lewis Mumford gave jolt to the occasion and I realized I had gotten as chicken as the rest of America because what he said—we had no more right in Vietnam than Russia had in Cuba—was true but I did not think he should use his position to declaim this. Later I saw the only way to accomplish anything is by 'abusing' your power." Exactly. Fahrenheit 9/11 is not a documentary for the ages, it is an act of counterpropaganda that has a boorish, bullying force. It is, all in all, a legitimate abuse of power."
slate.msn.com

A legitimate abuse of power. Looking forward to seeing the film.

Perhaps you should spend $10 and 2 hours to form your own opinion.
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