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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sandintoes who wrote (673168)2/24/2005 3:13:42 AM
From: sandintoes  Respond to of 769670
 
Offending people is Bill Maher's schtick
Boy is that the understatement of the year.

CNN ANCHOR HELPS PROMOTE HBO'S OFFENSIVE ANTI-FAITH "COMEDIAN";
JUST LAST WEEK, MAHER MOUTHED OFF ON MSNBC: "RELIGION STOPS PEOPLE
FROM THINKING....RELIGION IS A NEUROLOGICAL DISORDER."


Offending people is Bill Maher's schtick, as he showed again just
last week when he denounced religion -- all religion -- during a
February 15 appearance on MSNBC: "We are a nation that is
unenlightened because of religion. I do believe that. I think
religion stops people from thinking. I think it justified crazies.
I think flying planes into a building was a faith-based
initiative. I think religion is a neurological disorder."

Operating under the pretense that he offers brave, "politically
incorrect" insights, Maher has been a fount of mean-spiritedness
for years, such as during the 2000 election recount when he
cheered the idea of murdering Katherine Harris. Liberal
journalists would never tolerate such venom if it came from the
lips of a conservative talk show host.

But Maher didn't face a single hardball when he showed up on CNN's
NewsNight on Tuesday to promote the return of his weekly HBO show.
Instead, anchor Aaron Brown applauded the offensive comedian
("We're glad you're back at work") and commiserated with him about
how hard it is to speak freely in today's supposedly intolerant
climate.

"He is a political comedian at a time when the culture itself
seems to have a fair amount of trouble laughing at itself," Brown
asserted. He told Maher: "Someone suggested the other day that the
only people in the country who really get to speak their minds are
comedians and talk show hosts; everyone else gets trampled. That
seem to make sense to you?" Does Aaron Brown feel trampled?

Maher touted his uniqueness: "I don't think all comedians and talk
show hosts speak their mind. I think it's an even smaller club
than that. We do live in much more politically correct times." He
blamed Christians: "The country has become much more conservative,
partly because it's been taken over by the religious right."

For someone who complains about a stifling political environment,
Maher has no problem attracting publicity. He's been on NewsNight
at least three other times, which puts him one ahead of another of
Aaron Brown's favorite guests: Air America radio's Al Franken,
another mean-spirited liberal.