SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/4/2005 8:29:52 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
     "When you see a Michael Moore film, you know it's opinion"
      said Michael Moore's attorney Herschel Fink in court

news.yahoo.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)12/14/2005 8:33:53 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
    Conservative leaders who have fallen short publicly 
apologize, take responsibility for their actions, and
work on changing. Leaders on the Left simply are not held
into account in the same manner. The media give them a
free pass and rank-and-file leftists do not want to
question them. Being a leader on the Left means never
having to say you are sorry. It’s time for that to change.

Who ya' gonna believe?

Posted by Jerry Scharf
Common Sense and Wonder

<<<

How the Grinch Stole Michael Moore

(Peter Schweizer-FrontPageMagazine.com)

In a recent speech broadcast on C-SPAN, Michael Moore complains that a "crazy person" (that would be me) has been spreading lies about him, including the story that he owns stock in a number of evil vicious multinational corporations, including Halliburton.


"Michael Moore own Halliburton stock?" the anti-corporate activist told his supporters at the Paul Wellstone Memorial Dinner. "See, that's like a great comedy line. I know it's not true - I mean, I've never owned a share of stock in my life." He went on: "Anybody who knows me knows that, you know - who's gonna believe that? Just crazy people are going to believe it - crazy people who tune-in to the Fox News Channel." (Looks like this crazy person is in good company.)

On the back cover of my book, I include part of Michael Moore’s 990PF that he files with the IRS for a tax shelter he and his wife set up and control. The form clearly shows that Moore bought and sold shares in Halliburton and a number of other vicious, evil corporations. Look through the tax forms from 1998 to the present, and you will find more of the same.

How is it possible for Michael Moore to say he doesn’t own any stock while his tax forms say otherwise? Since Michael Moore simply never lies, this must be a case of identity theft.

Here is what must have happened. Someone set up a tax shelter and registered it at Michael Moore’s home address in Michigan. The thief transferred money from Moore’s accounts into this private foundation and then hired an investment broker to pour the money into corporate stock and bonds. The thief must have practiced forging Michael Moore’s name because the signature on the tax form is a perfect match. To make matters worse, the thief must look exactly like Michael Moore because the only other person involved with the tax shelter is his wife, Kathleen Glynn, and she never noticed anything going wrong. (The private foundation has no staff or other trustees.)

So who is behind this nefarious plot? My first guess is Dick Cheney.
Think about it, Cheney has a lot of experience with this covert operations. And a look at the stocks in portfolio includes plenty from the military-industrial complex and oil industry, who are of course all of Cheney’s best friends. When the Halliburton stock in question was first purchased, Cheney was CEO. What better way to boost the stock price than use Michael Moore’s money?

But at second glance, this sort of operation is too soft for Cheney. If he wanted to get Mike, a dirty ops campaign like this would be too mild. Wouldn’t he just trump up charges and invade Michigan?

That brings us to another possibility: Karl Rove. Whenever anything goes wrong on the Left (remember those fake Bush National Guard papers?), Mike thinks Rove is behind it. He has to be behind this, too, right?

All joking aside, Michael Moore is following a tactic that too many of the liberal-leftist elite use to avoid any sort of accountability. Think about it: when was the last time you heard a leader of the Left apologize for anything? Too many seem to embrace the Stalinist precept that they cannot make mistakes.

The real question facing the Left’s rank-and-file when it comes to the hypocrites I highlight in my book is this: are you going to stand by your principles or your heroes? If you truly believe what you claim, you shouldn’t tolerate this kind of hypocrisy on the part of your leaders.

Conservative leaders who have fallen short publicly apologize, take responsibility for their actions, and work on changing. Leaders on the Left simply are not held into account in the same manner. The media give them a free pass and rank-and-file leftists do not want to question them. Being a leader on the Left means never having to say you are sorry. It’s time for that to change.

So I ask those on the liberal-Left: Who are you going to believe, Michael Moore or his tax returns?

commonsensewonder.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/1/2006 3:25:33 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
GI’S BIG FAT SUIT VS. MOORE

Filed under: Dissecting Leftism, Hollywood Halfwits — Jerry
Common Sense and Wonder

<<< A double-amputee Iraq-war vet is suing Michael Moore for $85 million, claiming the portly peacenik recycled an old interview and used it out of context to make him appear anti-war in “Fahrenheit 9/11.”

Sgt. Peter Damon, 33, who strongly supports America’s invasion of Iraq, said he never agreed to be in the 2004 movie, which trashes President Bush.

In the 2003 interview, which he did at Walter Reed Army Hospital for NBC News, he discussed only a new painkiller the military was using on wounded vets.

“They took the clip because it was a gut-wrenching scene,” Damon said yesterday. “They sandwiched it in. [Moore] was using me as ammunition.” >>>

Continue
nypost.com

commonsensewonder.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/30/2006 1:34:30 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
How does he sleep at night?

by Mike Gallagher
Townhall.com
Jun 30, 2006

Do you think Michael Moore sleeps well at night? I’ve often wondered how the America-hating filmmaker could live with himself. After all, this is a guy who has made enormous sums of money by manipulating Columbine massacre victims and American soldiers into being pawns in his hateful “documentaries.”

But now that one of his victims has become a casualty of war, I’ve just got to believe he has a very, very difficult time getting eight hours of sleep a night. Surely the man has a sliver of a conscience and sees the face of Staff Sgt. Raymond J. Plouhar every waking hour of his life.

When Moore’s film “Fahrenheit 9/11” first came out, I dreaded seeing it. Knowing what Moore does for a living, I knew his anti-war film would be a disgusting spectacle. If a man is capable of having a Columbine shooting victim get wheeled into a retail store to demand a refund for the bullets left in her body by Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold in order to stage a scene for “Bowling for Columbine”, he’d be capable of just about anything.

But I strongly believe that no one should criticize a book or a movie or a TV show without seeing it. It’s just not fair to rail against something without having the benefit of knowing the material.

So off to the movie theatre I went. Thankfully, I had a free pass, so I didn’t have to pay one dime that would help line Moore’s ample pockets.

“Fahrenheit 9/11” was even worse than I expected. It could reasonably be described as the mother lode of smear jobs against the American soldier. Moore undoubtedly spent hundreds of hours interviewing soldiers who are fighting in this war, but naturally, the only interviews he showed were servicemen talking about going out to kill Iraqis and even making fun of a dead enemy by poking him with a stick and calling him “Ali Baba.”

He also had a field day with a couple of military recruiters. In one scene, he showed Ray Plouhar trying to recruit young men in a shopping mall parking lot in Flint, Michigan. I’m sure Michael Moore really enjoyed showing Plouhar saying, “It’s better to get them when they’re in ones and twos and work on them that way.” Moore was obviously attempting to portray Ray as a buffoon who was so desperate for recruits that he would make that kind of comment.

Well, Ray Plouhar was no buffoon. He was a brave hero who had taken four years off from active duty to serve as a recruiter, and then went right back into battle, fighting for a cause he believed in. Plouhar was such an honorable young man that he donated one of his kidneys to his uncle.

And he sure didn’t appreciate the way Moore portrayed him in the film, nor did he approve of the movie’s content. Some said he would never have agreed to allow Moore to use him in the movie if he had known what Moore’s intentions were going to be. But then again, that’s what a propagandist like Michael Moore does. He distorts, deceives, manipulates and laughs all the way to the bank.

On Monday, June 26, 2006, Staff Sgt. Raymond J. Plouhar, 30, died of injuries he suffered while conducting combat operations in Iraq’s volatile Anbar province. His grieving father said, “I’m proud that my son wanted to protect the freedom of this country whether we all agree with the war or not.”

I’m sure his opinion of Michael Moore and the way he treated his son in “Fahrenheit 9/11” isn’t something that could be published in this column.

Now that Ray Plouhar has died, I wonder if there will be many Michael Moore-style filmmakers poking their cameras into Moore’s face and asking him how he feels. Wouldn’t it be interesting to hear what Moore would say about Ray Plouhar now?

I’m guessing that despite his millionaire lifestyle (I once watched him climb aboard a huge, private jet in State College, Pennsylvania), he isn’t sleeping very well these days. I have enough faith in the human condition to believe that even Michael Moore feels ashamed of what he did to one of our heroes. I’ve got to believe that he tosses and turns on his silk sheets, feeling pretty terrible that his movie caused Ray Plouhar and his family such embarrassment. I think he must be absolutely miserable in realizing what a mean-spirited jerk he is.

But then again, I tend to be an optimist about such matters.

Mike Gallagher is a contributing editor at Townhall.com, a nationally syndicated radio talk show host, and a contributor and guest host on the Fox News Channel. Gallagher's website is MikeOnline.com

Copyright © 2006 Townhall.com

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)11/17/2006 8:23:06 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
What's next for the ethics challenged über lefty?

Michael Moore tries plagiarism

hat tip to Michelle Malkin:

michellemalkin.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)11/30/2006 5:33:13 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael Moore Threatens Democrats: Bring Troops Home Now or Else!

Posted by Noel Sheppard
NewsBusters.org
November 30, 2006

It seems that one prominent member of the ultra-left in our country is starting to get the sinking feeling that he was duped by the Democrat bait and switch campaign strategy. Schlockumentartist and leading propagandist Michael Moore practically issued a fatwa at his website Wednesday demanding Democrats bring American troops home from Iraq immediately or suffer the consequences in the next elections
(grateful hat tip to NB member “aero”, emphasis mine throughout):

<<< The responsibility to end this war now falls upon the Democrats. Congress controls the purse strings and the Constitution says only Congress can declare war. Mr. Reid and Ms. Pelosi now hold the power to put an end to this madness. Failure to do so will bring the wrath of the voters. We aren't kidding around, Democrats, and if you don't believe us, just go ahead and continue this war another month. We will fight you harder than we did the Republicans. The opening page of my website has a photo of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, each made up by a collage of photos of the American soldiers who have died in Bush's War. But it is now about to become the Bush/Democratic Party War unless swift action is taken. >>>

Moore followed with an outline that couldn’t be any clearer:

This is what we demand:

1. Bring the troops home now. Not six months from now. NOW.
Quit looking for a way to win. We can't win. We've lost. Sometimes you lose. This is one of those times. Be brave and admit it.

2. Apologize to our soldiers and make amends. Tell them we are sorry they were used to fight a war that had NOTHING to do with our national security. We must commit to taking care of them so that they suffer as little as possible. The mentally and physically maimed must get the best care and significant financial compensation. The families of the deceased deserve the biggest apology and they must be taken care of for the rest of their lives.

3. We must atone for the atrocity we have perpetuated on the people of Iraq. There are few evils worse than waging a war based on a lie, invading another country because you want what they have buried under the ground. Now many more will die. Their blood is on our hands, regardless for whom we voted. If you pay taxes, you have contributed to the three billion dollars a week now being spent to drive Iraq into the hellhole it's become. When the civil war is over, we will have to help rebuild Iraq. We can receive no redemption until we have atoned. >>>

And simply concluded:

<<< “We demand the Democrats listen to us and get out of Iraq now.” >>>

Those of you that have been following this blog the past few weeks know that I have been questioning what will happen when folks begin to realize just how much they were scammed by the Democrats and the media in this election. Frankly, there were more lies and shameless distortions of reality during this campaign than conceivably any in history, and the press were a huge part of it.

If folks like Moore are starting to get angry, one has to wonder when this begins to become apparent to the Netroots. At that point, something is likely to hit the fan. We shall know in the fullness of time just what that substance is.

newsbusters.org

newsbusters.org

michaelmoore.com

michaelmoore.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)3/12/2007 3:24:57 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hat tip to MrLucky:

My 2¢: This is an Associate Pravda report. I'll give you 10:1 odds that what these liberal documentarians found was far worse than the soft peddle job presented here by Associated Pravda.

Documentary Questions Moore's Tactics

The Associated Press
Mar 11, 5:02 PM EST

AUSTIN, Texas -- As documentary filmmakers, Debbie Melnyk and Rick Caine looked up to Michael Moore.

Then they tried to do a documentary of their own about him — and ran into the same sort of resistance Moore himself famously faces in his own films.

The result is "Manufacturing Dissent," which turns the camera on the confrontational documentarian and examines some of his methods.
Among their revelations in the movie, which had its world premiere Saturday night at the South by Southwest film festival: That Moore actually did speak with then-General Motors chairman Roger Smith, the evasive subject of his 1989 debut "Roger & Me," but chose to withhold that footage from the final cut.

The husband-and-wife directors spent over two years making the movie, which follows Moore on his college tour promoting 2004's "Fahrenheit 9/11." The film shows Melnyk repeatedly approaching Moore for an interview and being rejected; members of Moore's team also kick the couple out of the audience at one of his speeches, saying they weren't allowed to be shooting there.

At their own premiere Saturday night, the Toronto-based filmmakers expected pro-Moore plants in the audience heckling or trying to otherwise sabotage the screening, but it turned out to be a tame affair.

"It went really well," Melnyk said. "People really liked the film and laughed at the right spots and got the movie and we're really happy about it."

Moore hasn't commented publicly on "Manufacturing Dissent" and Melnyk thinks he never will. He also hasn't responded to several calls and e-mails from The Associated Press.

"There's no point for Michael to respond to the film because then it gives it publicity," she said.

"(President) Bush didn't respond to `Fahrenheit 9/11,' and there's a reason for that," Caine added.

The two were and still are fans of all his movies — including the polarizing "Fahrenheit 9/11," which grossed over $119 million and won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival — and initially wanted to do a biography on him.

They traveled to his childhood home of Davison, Mich., visited his high school and traced his early days in politics and journalism.

"The fact that he made documentaries entertaining was extremely influential and got all kinds of people out to see them," said Melnyk, whose previous films with Caine include 1998's "Junket Whore." "Let's face it, he made documentaries popular and that is great for all documentary filmmakers."

"All of these films — `Super Size Me,' `An Inconvenient Truth' — we've all been riding in his wake," said Caine. "There's a nonfiction film revolution going on and we're all beneficiaries of that. For that point alone, he's worth celebrating."

But after four months of unsuccessfully trying to sit down with Moore for an on-camera interview, they realized they needed to approach the subject from a different angle. They began looking at the process Moore employs in his films, and the deeper they dug, the more they began to question him.

The fact that Moore spoke with Smith, including a lengthy question-and-answer exchange during a May 1987 GM shareholders meeting, first was reported in a Premiere magazine article three years later. Transcripts of the discussion had been leaked to the magazine, and a clip of the meeting appeared in "Manufacturing Dissent." Moore also reportedly interviewed Smith on camera in January 1988 at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York.

Since then, in the years since "Roger & Me" put Moore on the map, those details seem to have been suppressed and forgotten.

"It was shocking, because to me that was the whole premise of `Roger & Me,'" Melnyk said.

She and Caine also had trouble finding people to talk on camera about Moore, partly because potential interview subjects assumed they were creating a right-wing attack piece; as self-proclaimed left-wingers, they weren't.

Despite what they've learned, the directors still appreciate Moore.

"We're a bit disappointed and disillusioned with Michael," Melnyk said, "but we are still very grateful to him for putting documentaries out there in a major way that people can go to a DVD store and they're right up there alongside dramatic features."

movies.msn.com;



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)4/16/2007 1:31:49 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael Moore is Sick

By Lorie Byrd on Moonbats
Wizbang

The New York Post is reporting Michael Moore's latest stunt. Link via Drudge.

<<< Filmmaker Michael Moore's production company took ailing Ground Zero responders to Cuba in a stunt aimed at showing that the U.S. health-care system is inferior to Fidel Castro's socialized medicine, according to several sources with knowledge of the trip.

The trip was to be filmed as part of the controversial director's latest documentary, "Sicko," an attack on American drug companies and HMOs that Moore hopes to debut at the Cannes Film Festival next month.

Two years in the making, the flick also takes aim at the medical care being provided to people who worked on the toxic World Trade Center debris pile, according to several 9/11 workers approached by Moore's producers.

But the sick sojourn, which some say uses ill 9/11 workers as pawns, has angered many in the responder community. >>>

Update: My post title is a reference to Moore's movie title, "Sicko" and to his past as a dishonest movie maker and all around jerk. Just a couple of the reasons I have such a low opinion of Moore can be found here and here.
decision08.net
wizbangblog.com

feeds.wizbangblog.com

nypost.com

drudgereport.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)5/18/2007 9:38:48 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Well DUH! Every fact is true Michael. Your friggin' lies aren't facts though are they?

****

Laugh of the Day: Michael Moore Says, 'Every Fact In My Films Is True'

Posted by Dave Pierre on May 17, 2007 - 20:53.
NewsBusters.org

Time magazine has interviewed Michael Moore in anticipation of his next film, Sicko, which reportedly takes aim at the U.S. health care system. (HT: Drudge.) The interview is a run-of-the-mill Q&A that's basically a yawner until Moore lets out some pure hilarity.

<<< TIME: Do you think people will accuse the movie of inaccuracy?

MOORE: I offered $10,000 to anybody who could find a single fact in Fahrenheit 9/11 that was wrong.

TIME: Have you had to pay anything?

MOORE: No, of course not. Every fact in my films is true. And yet how often do I have to read over and over again about supposed falsehoods? The opinions in the film are mine. They may not be true, but I think they are. >>>


Good grief. "Every fact in my films is true"? Not even close. An entire industry has practically erupted in debunking Moore's films.


Fahrenheit 9/11? Debunked:

"Fifty-Nine Deceits in Fahrenheit 9/11," (pdf) by Dave Kopel, Independence Institute (Note: Very lengthy) ...

"Unfairenheit 9/11: The lies of Michael Moore," by Christopher Hitchens ...

Bowling for Columbine? Debunked:

"Bowling for Columbine: Documentary or Fiction?" by David T. Hardy (Note: Very Lengthy) ...

"Moore admits to altering 'Bowling for Columbine' DVD" by Brendan Nyhan, SpinSanity.com ...

"Bowl-o-Drama," by Daniel Lyons, Forbes magazine ...

See also: MooreWatch ... MooreExposed ... "Moore's myriad mistakes," by Bryan Keefer, SpinSanity.com ... Michael Moore Is A Big Fat Stupid White Man by David Hardy and Jason Clarke ...

It seems Moore owes $10,000 to a lot of people!

all supporting links found here
newsbusters.org



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)5/22/2007 1:46:14 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
    "Hospitals are falling apart, surgeons lack basic supplies
and must reuse latex gloves. Patients must buy their
sutures on the black market and provide bed sheets and
food for extended hospital stays."

'SICKO': WHITEWASHING FOR FIDEL

Rich Lowry
NEW YORK POST
Opinion

May 22, 2007 -- IS all that ails the U.S. health-care system that it's not run by a communist dictatorship? That has long been a premise of apologists for Fidel Castro who extol the virtues of medical care on his totalitarian island nation.

Left-wing documentary filmmaker Michael Moore is reviving this Cold War relic of an argument in his new movie on health care, "Sicko," which premieres in a few weeks and favorably compares the Cuban health-care system to ours.
Moore ostentatiously took a few sick 9/11 workers to Cuba for care. "If they can do this," Moore told Time magazine, referring to the Cubans, "we can do it."

All that the Cuban government has done, however, is run a decades-long propaganda campaign to convince credulous or dishonest people that its health-care system is worth emulating. These people believe - or pretend to believe for ideological reasons - that a dictatorship can crush a country's economy and spirit, yet still deliver exemplary medical care.

Cuban health care works only for the select few: if you are a high-ranking member of the party or the military and have access to top-notch clinics; or a health-care tourist who can pay in foreign currency at a special facility catering to foreigners; or a documentarian who can be relied upon to produce a lickspittle film whitewashing the system.

Ordinary Cubans experience the wasteland of the real system. Even aspirin and Pepto-Bismol can be rare and there's a black market for them.
According to a report in the Canadian newspaper the National Post: "Hospitals are falling apart, surgeons lack basic supplies and must reuse latex gloves. Patients must buy their sutures on the black market and provide bed sheets and food for extended hospital stays."

How could it be any different when Cuba embarked on a campaign of economic self-sabotage with the revolution of 1959? It went from third in per capita food consumption in Latin America to near the bottom, according to a State Department report. Per capita consumption of basic foodstuffs like cereals and meat actually has declined from the 1950s. There are fewer cars (true of no other country in the hemisphere), and development of electrical power has trailed every other Latin American country except Haiti.

But the routine medical care, we're supposed to believe, is superb. The statistic frequently cited for this proposition is that Cuba has the lowest infant mortality rate in Latin America. Put aside that the reflexively dishonest Cuban government is the ultimate source for these figures. Cuba had the lowest infant mortality rate in Latin America prior to the revolution and has lost ground to other countries around the world since. It also has an appallingly high abortion rate, meaning most problem pregnancies are pre-emptively ended.

Other countries in Latin America have made advances in health without Cuba's vicious suppression of human rights (which, no doubt, contributes to the island having the highest suicide rate in Latin America). The way public health works in Cuba was nicely illustrated by the case of Dr. Desi Mendoza Rivero, who complained of an outbreak of dengue fever that the regime preferred to ignore in the late 1990s, and was jailed for his trouble.

As is always the case with Cuba, anything that's wrong is blamed on the United States. If there is a shortage of medicine, well, that's because of the U.S. embargo. But the United States is not the only country in the world that sells drugs. Cuba could buy them from Europe or elsewhere, and the U.S. embargo makes an exception for medicines.

The only reason to fantasize about Cuban health care is to stick a finger in the eye of the Yanquis. For the likes of Michael Moore, the true glory of Cuba is less its health care than the fact that it is an enemy of the United States. That's why romanticizing Cuban medicine isn't just folly, but itself qualifies as a kind of sickness.

comments.lowry@nationalreview.com

nypost.com
whitewashing_for_fidel_opedcolumnists_rich_lowry.htm



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)5/23/2007 10:28:00 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael Ramirez
Editorial Cartoonist for Investor's Business Daily



ibdeditorial.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)5/23/2007 11:40:03 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Less Of Moore

By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted Tuesday, May 22, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Hypocrisy: Propaganda filmmaker Michael Moore is wondering where America's soul has gone. He could get the answer by engaging in a little bit of introspection.

Moore is being feted and toasted at the Cannes Film Festival for his latest manipulative movie "Sicko" just as he had been for "Fahrenheit 9/11." Imagine that: Garnering applause at a snooty international event for anti-American movies.

Naturally, the media treat Moore as if he's a serious person making serious movies, which lets him explain his higher motives in creating an opus with a schoolyard title.

"I'm trying to explore bigger ideas and bigger issues, and in this case the bigger issue in this film is who are we as a people?" Moore told reporters after a press screening.

"Why do we behave the way we behave? What has become of us? Where is our soul?"

Speaking of "soul," the real soul-destroying problem we have in this country comes from a cadre of hostile culturati who harbor malice for the virtues that made America strong and proud. Moore is mainly an ego-driven opportunist, but he fits in neatly with the sneering elitists since he speaks their language so well.

The elitists — who are always on the left — trade in lies, half-truths and disinformation. They're anti-capitalists (except when it benefits them). Their goal is to undermine our American tradition of free men, free markets and individuality that has served better than any other system in history. They dreamily long for progressive (or more precisely, statist and socialist) policies to regiment human behavior. They are nostalgic for a time that never was in this country but regrettably was in the Soviet Union.

The elitists' rejection of our time-honored values has torn at our souls, assaulted our sensibilities, eroded our work ethic, softened our attitudes about responsibility and increased our sense of entitlement. The last insult is in their mainstreaming of mushy thinking.

The insufferably narcissistic Moore, who lives on the ritzy Upper West Side of Manhattan while portraying himself to be just another working man, has helped the cause by using the art of distortion to paint America as a villain.

In "Sicko," his critique of the U.S. health care system, Moore tries to claim that U.S. medical care is a captive of free-market "greed." Nearly 20 years earlier, he used "Roger & Me" to try to paint General Motors and then-CEO Roger Smith as cogs of a rapacious American corporate machine that devours the weak and the poor.

Moore was most dishonest when he made "Fahrenheit 9/11." He accused President Bush of using the 9/11 attack as a rah-rah excuse to go to war with Iraq. It was propaganda. Dave Kopel of the Colorado-based Independence Institute documented 59 deceits in the movie.

In his Riefenstahl-ish "Sicko," Moore tries to make the argument that Cuban health care is superior in both quality and cost to U.S. health care. But if it were Moore's own health at stake, would he choose Cuba or the U.S.? This year even dictator Fidel Castro had to call in a doctor from abroad to get proper medical care for a relatively uncomplicated illness.

But don't say anything negative about the island-prison's health care. Doing so has landed many a Cuban in prison — assuming the care itself didn't put him in the ground — as would making a film that criticized the Cuban government, even on milder terms than Moore criticized the U.S.

It's reasonable to think that Moore himself may have considered the irony. But his greed and ego override it.

Were Moore merely poking at an ossified establishment, were he a modern-day Will Rogers or H.L. Mencken, then his work might have value.

But he has tried to pass off his fiction as fact. He goes for the emotional at the expense of the rational. He stages scenes and takes cheap shots. His is the work of a pretentious auteur looking for his own soul. That such a man should be praised is a shame on everyone involved.

ibdeditorials.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)5/24/2007 11:49:45 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hat tip to Brumar89:

MICHAEL MOORE: The less you know, the more you like his films! And vice versa, apparently:

<<<Michael Moore received a standing -- and sustained -- ovation following the screening of his latest documentary, Sicko, at the Cannes Film Festival Saturday. But some critics suggested that in censuring the U.S. health system, Moore was overly generous in his praise of other countries'. At a news conference, Canadian journalists harangued Moore for, as Toronto Star film critic Peter Howell wrote, making "it seem as if Canada's socialized medicine is flawless and that Canadians are satisfied with the status quo." Apparently taken aback by the assault from the Canadian journalists, Moore said, "You Canadians! You used to be so funny! ... You gave us all our best comedians. When did you turn so dark?" >>>

I don't know, maybe three years on a waiting list for hemorrhoid surgery will do that to you . . . .

posted at 01:13 PM by Glenn Reynolds
instapundit.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/5/2007 6:40:46 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Restating The Obvious

By podcasts@redstate.com (Redstate Network) on Featured Stories
Redstate - Conservative News and Community

For the umpteenth time, it appears that it has been made necessary for someone to write about the fact--which should be obvious by now--that life in Cuba really is bad. And given the state of current cinematic events, it would seem that the following passage (whose point, again, should be obvious by now) needs to be emphasized for those who are "reality-based" in name only:

<<< Healthcare and education are supposed to be the redeeming graces of the regime, but this is questionable. There are a large number of doctors, but, according to most Cubans I know, many have left the country and the health system is in a ragged state--apart from those hospitals reserved for foreigners--and people often have to pay a bribe to get treated. Michael Moore, the American film director, who has recently been praising the system should take note of the real life stories beneath the statistics. I went into a couple of hospitals for locals on my latest visit. In the first, my friend told me not to say a word in case my accent was noticed, as foreigners are not allowed in these places. I was appalled by the hygiene and amazed at the antiquity of the building and some of the equipment. I was told that the vast majority of Cuban hospitals, apart from two in Havana, were built before the revolution. Which revolution, I wondered; this one seemed to date from the 1900s.

On another occasion, I saw a man in a white coat with a stethoscope around his neck hurrying along the boulevard of Vedado, in west Havana. We struck up a conversation. He was on his way to the hospital around the corner. I asked him if he would take me there. He was charming and intelligent, and had that ease of communication that many Cubans possess: he wasn't at all taken aback by an unknown woman in dark glasses asking to accompany him to work. The doctor told me that I shouldn't be too shocked; the hospital was being "refurbished." The building certainly was in a state of filth and decrepitude. This was not a place one would want to be ill in. >>>

redstate.com

prospect-magazine.co.uk



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/21/2007 5:23:04 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    There isn’t enough money in the U.S. to pay for free, 
wait-free top-quality universal health care. The law of
supply and demand can no more be repealed than the law
that all documentary films must be left-wing.

Sicko

Posted by Mark Noonan
Blogs for Bush
June 20, 2007

Kyle Smith takes a look at Michael Moore's latest lie-fest - a must read, as we'll soon be inundated with stories of how brilliant Moore is and how great Hillarycare will be once she's elected. This one paragraph in the review shows the flaw not just in Moore's call for socialised medicine, but for any scheme to make life grand by putting any sort of bureaucrat into the mix:
    Not everyone can have everything they want because there 
is not an unlimited supply of anything (except maybe air);
that’s why Canada and Britain have lotteries to determine
who gets treatment. Deciding who gets what and when
involves rationing, either by price or by waiting or some
combination of the two. If the Mets announced that World
Series tickets were free to anyone lining up in front of
the Shea Stadium box office, you’d have to go get in line
now. Medicare, which isn’t an unlimited benefit, is by
itself projected to eat up a third of federal tax revenues
by 2030. There isn’t enough money in the U.S. to pay for
free, wait-free top-quality universal health care. The law
of supply and demand can no more be repealed than the law
that all documentary films must be left-wing. Gratzer's
book suggests a real-world solution: decentralization that
gives patients more choice: "both failed options [HMOs and
Medicare/Medicaid] share one fatal feature. They remove
choices from patients and give them to government or
corporate bureaucrats. Restricting patient choices in this
way, flouting the laws of basic economics, has been a
mistake. It's the reason why, while pocket calculators
have declined in price from $500 to $5, the price of
pacemakers keeps rising."
About that pacemaker - my father has one; in fact, he's on his second. The health care we provide for our geezers out here in Nevada (based on Medicare, but made much better via tax dollars paid by Nevadans...but still a pretty lousy system) paid for most of it, but I was still flabbergasted at the cost of the actual device. It was something like 8 or 10 thousand dollars. As dad is getting on in years, I asked the doctor what would happen to the pacemaker should dad, well, die...he told me it would be buried with dad, as it couldn't be re-used in someone else...not even taken out and donated to some third world country where just about any medical help would be greatly appreciated. This is the sort of health care system we get when we allow bureaucrats and lawyers - rather than doctors and patients - to rule the roost.

I do wish that everyone would get it into their heads that there is a price to be paid for everything. If we could just accomplish that task, a great improvement would be worked in the world.

blogsforbush.com

blogs.nypost.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/21/2007 8:41:13 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Photoshop of the day

By Michelle Malkin
June 20, 2007 09:18 PM



Anti-communist blogger Babalu reworks Michael Moore’s Sicko logo–and he and his anti-Castro blog mates will be doing special Sicko blogging next week. Don’t miss it.

michellemalkin.com

babalublog.com

babalublog.com




To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/22/2007 12:19:37 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Prepare to be Sickened by SiCKO

By Peter Barry Chowka
American Thinker

From start to end, SiCKO, the latest “documentary” from notorious writer and filmmaker Michael Moore, is a stunning example of the Big Lie. Almost shockingly devoid of fact and context, it's instead based on highly selective, emotionally-driven, and deeply flawed anecdotes, strung together by writer-director-producer Moore's trademark folksy, soft-spoken, whimsical personal narrative. SiCKO (the unusual capitalization is Moore's conceit) is not a documentary at all, but a naked propaganda exercise on behalf of full-bore socialism. A better title for it would be Pinko.

The intent is to mislead rather than to inform or enlighten. SiCKO strikes me as even worse than Moore's previous, problematic long form works, the anti-gun Bowling for Columbine and the rabidly anti-Bush Fahrenheit 9/11.

SiCKO is opening today in limited release. Originally scheduled to open “wide” theatrically in the U.S. on June 29, its distributors have just announced that its formal opening has been pushed up one week, with pre-release “sneak previews” also now scheduled in 27 urban markets around the country. These developments are in the wake of a big publicity push for the film over the last few weeks, pulled off with the complicity of the mainstream media, and considerably boosted by viral marketing.

In mid-June, a 124 minute-long version of SiCKO–apparently the complete final cut–began appearing in fairly high quality streams and downloadable files on the Internet, allowing for an early review. (As of this writing, it is unclear if a copy of SiCKO was actually “leaked” to the Internet, or whether it’s popping up on an offshore Web site that facilitates peer-to-peer file sharing and for a time on YouTube was just another ploy in the film's manipulative viral marketing plan. In a search of Google News yesterday thousands of website posts already highlighted the “SiCKO leak,” further calling attention to the movie with tons of free publicity in the crucial days before its official commercial release.)

It may not be surprising that a polarizing political icon like Moore, with a hefty fan base, has produced another piece of pure Leftist cant, but the brazenness, magnitude, and absolute chutzpah inherent in this latest sleazy project are surely greater orders of magnitude over the top than any of his earlier work. It's as if he believes that he's finally connected with an issue–socialized medicine (or “universal health care”)–that is poised to change history–to wrestle private enterprise-driven health care to the ground, once and for all, and to snuff the last breaths of freedom, autonomy, and choice out of it.

In this big picture sense, the film (despite its limitations it's an obvious benefit to the cause) struck me as far more overwhelming, dangerous, and insidious–and ultimately more shameless and ambitious in its agenda–than I had imagined it would be. (Never underestimate the Left, I guess.) The fact that it has received mostly good early notices, including by the Fox News Channel's reviewer who saw it at the Cannes film festival in May (“brilliant” and “uplifting” he called it), speaks volumes about the mainstream media's inability to review a new work without ideology, ignorance, or confusion, or some combination of the three, ruling the day.

My fear after seeing SiCKO is that it may become the most highly applauded and influential of Moore's films (not least because of his timing, which is very much in sync with the new and potentially unstoppable political push in the U.S. on behalf of government-controlled universal health care).

Before I sat down to watch SiCKO, I felt that I already knew way more than I wanted to about Moore, his M.O., and this particular production. As a journalist reporting on the complexities of American health care for three decades, I've charted with dismay the gathering momentum towards a government takeover of the field. I wasn't prepared, however, for the extent of the other freebies Moore wants to flow unhindered from the government on down. Free college education, free day care, government-compensated months' long maternity leave, and even state workers going into the homes of new mothers to do their laundry and other chores without charge–in other words, Socialism with a capital S that will lead, Moore and his ilk hope, to the complete socialist-statist “paradise” imagined by him and his heroes (including Che, Hugo, and Fidel).

Such an overarching theme would be absurdly funny if it weren't so deadly dangerous–if Moore were not, in effect, playing with fire. But our society is now teeming with people who are ready to take Moore's kind of nonsense completely to heart, conditioned and taught as they have been since birth that they have a “right” to everything they think they deserve, just by being here.

The education industry, the media, politicians and special interest groups have prepared people to anticipate nothing less than complete accommodation of their needs and wants. And now, “health care as a right” has been added to the growing list of entitlements. Since most Americans have yet to agree to go willingly into this bleak and government-controlled future, the current crop of left politicians is adopting a centralized model, such as they admire in France and Cuba, to forcefully take all of us there. And along with the expansion of these myriad new “rights” to “free” health care go the extinction of many of our freedoms.

A June 2007 public opinion poll of residents in Massachusetts by Suffolk University found that “an overwhelming number, 92 percent, said everyone has a right to health care.” The website of the non-profit foundation run by former Democrat Congressman from Iowa Berkley Bedell, who used his influence with Iowa Democrat Sen. Tom Harkin to force the National Institutes of Health to start spending hundreds of millions of dollars on complementary and alternative medicine, says that “Cuba” is the “model for alternative medicine” in the U.S.

Moore plays these themes like a virtuoso–actually like a hot new conductor, baton in hand, standing before a full symphony orchestra that's tuning up and waiting for direction. Even the American Medical Association, for decades vehemently opposed to “socialized medicine,” has joined the chorus. In 2001, the AMA added to its “Principles of medical ethics,” which its members must subscribe to, this one: “A physician shall support access to medical care for all people.”

With news of SiCKO's subject and plot (including the film maker's and his cast members' potentially illegal trip to Cuba) all over the media, I thought I was prepared for what I'd see on the screen. But the way the film actually proceeds, leading up to its final half hour, with Moore gauzily rhapsodizing everything about life in socialist France (which has one of the most firmly entrenched, nanny state entitlement cultures anywhere) and then in communist Cuba, is astonishing. Meanwhile, Moore completely whitewashes the sclerotic, inefficient, and stagnant mess that socialism (including its socialized medical system) brought to the French economy. Only now, as the center-right of French politics has begun reforming the worst socialist absurdities (the 30 hour work week for example) is France throwing off some of its torpor. Cuba’s failed, frequently deadly and murderous Marxist police state doesn’t matter, because both countries have freebies to offer!

And Moore has managed to find in France and Cuba personalities out of central casting, who come across as hip, smart, empathetic, and successful professionals, and get them on film singing their country's praises!

The absence of any actual, verifiable information, and essential context, about the big and extremely complex subject at hand (health care, after all, represents one-sixth of the entire U.S. economy) is appalling, but that probably won't bother either the hard core collectivists and statists who will eagerly pay to see this thing or the fans of the expanding entitlement culture, who will root for SiCKO's commercial success and, more to the point, the progress of Moore's single payer universal health care agenda in the evolving national political debate.

Fortunately, a number of Web sites and blogs, and even competing filmmakers, are taking Moore and his fellow travelers to task for their misrepresentations, omissions, and obfuscations. To correct just two of the lies:


- Moore throws around a figure of “50 million uninsured Americans.” It's more accurate to report that the number of Americans who are uninsured cannot be verified. A significant percentage, however, can afford insurance but choose not to buy it. In addition, as many as one-third of the uninsured are eligible for Medicaid or other free government programs but fail to apply for them. And, ultimately, “uninsured” does not mean without access to care.

- Literally every day, the mainstream media in the countries whose government-run medical systems Moore holds up as superior models publish stories documenting the failure of mandatory, no-opt-out, state-run medical care. The laundry list of ills, in the U.K. alone, includes patients waiting months or even years for critical drugs and treatments (sometimes becoming disabled or dying because of the delay or lack of care), people denied therapies altogether because of rationing or cost (see, for example, an article last February in The Scotsman, “Cancer patients told life-prolonging treatment is too expensive for NHS”), an explosion in the size of the medical bureaucracy, and thousands of physicians taking to the streets earlier this year to protest.

One bottom line, so to speak, is particularly telling: Moore, who is obese, would most likely be denied a number of common health care procedures and treatments in one of his favored government-controlled socialist medicine systems, the U.K.'s National Health Service (NHS), because of his excessive weight. Recently, the cash-strapped NHS actually started limiting or prohibiting therapies for residents who are fat or who smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol.

Oh, but these are just details, after all, that would only get in the way of the misty-eyed collectivist party line. This past week, preaching to his chorus, Moore engaged in a first round of high gloss soft ball interviews and media appearances including on ABC TV's Good Morning America, Nightline, and The View, and he was the only sit down guest on David Letterman's CBS TV show on Friday June 15.

Earlier in the week, Moore spent a day at the California state capitol in Sacramento, headlining a rally for single payer health care, appearing at a press conference with leading Democrat politicians, and–hold on to your hats–testifying as an expert witness at a California Senate hearing advocating single payer socialized medicine in the nation's biggest state. (The hearing, captured by the California Channel's cameras, starts 39 minutes and 20 seconds into the streaming Windows Media video file at this url.)

All of this posturing, needless to say, is truly sickening. . . including the vision of Moore as a pied piper of endless freebies, a Santa Claus (one can easily imagine him actually playing that role) with a bottomless bag of gifts. What we're seeing, with SiCKO not even in theaters yet, is the attempt at the final push over the finish line for the complete takeover of American health care by the government–potentially the biggest change in the way medicine is practiced in the U.S. since the time of the Founding Fathers.

Unfortunately, judging by the media's fawning reception, and the promises by many politicians to deliver up mandatory government-run universal health care à la Moore with the '08 elections, it really feels like the fix is in.

Peter Barry Chowka is a widely published investigative journalist and medical-political analyst who specializes in reporting on the politics of health care and innovative therapies. His Web site is chowka.com.

americanthinker.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/25/2007 1:28:41 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
Forgotten? Michael Moore's Invested in Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare

Posted by Dave Pierre
NewsBusters.org
June 25, 2007 - 08:19.

Michael Moore's new documentary, Sicko, challenges U.S. healthcare. Yet in the coverage of the film, some interesting facts about Moore appear to be ignored. These facts are addressed on page 53 of the bestselling book by Peter Schweizer, Do As I Say (Not As I Do):

<<< [Moore's] IRS forms make for interesting reading. Over the past five years, Moore's "savings account" has included such evil pharmaceutical and medical companies as Pfizer, Merck, Genzyme, Elan PLC, Eli Lilly, Becton Dickinson, and Boston Scientific. "Being screwed by your HMO and ill-served by pharmaceutical companies is a shared American experience," he recently told the Detroit News ... He may savage HMOs in his film Sicko, but he has also owned shares of Pharmacia Corporation and Tenet Healthcare. He may have liked their price-to-earnings ratio.

Note: The first edition of Schweizer's book is dated November 2005.

If any reviewers have mentioned the above facts in their reviews, I've missed it. If you've found one, maybe you can post the link to the review below.

newsbusters.org

amazon.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/25/2007 1:39:03 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Time Bought Into Michael Moore's 'Sicko' Schtick

Posted by Lynn Davidson

June 25, 2007 - 03:34.



There is yet another example of the mythology of Michael Moore growing with the complicity of the media. Time's article by S. James Snyder, “Michael Moore: 'I'm Mainstream Now' ” read like another example of an incurious journalist who bought into Moore's PR and joined in with some covert activism. For the past month or so, finding bias in an article about Michael Moore has been about as easy as it is to find "creative editing" in Moore's films, and this article was no exception.

The most significant untruth in this article was Moore's carefully vague and misleading claim that he didn't intend to go to Cuba “in the first place,” and only after being turned away from his real destination, the Guantanamo Bay detention center, by that heartless US military, did he go to communist Cuba (bold mine throughout):

<<< Moore dismissed the controversy surround his visit to Cuba with a group of 9/11 responders seeking medical treatment, documented in his new film. He said he had not intended to go to Cuba in the first place. "I didn't go to Cuba. We left Miami to go to Guantanamo Bay — to American soil." Only after being ignored at the mouth of Guantanamo Bay did he instead dock and disembark on Cuban soil. Since then, he says, he has been harassed by the U.S. government. "The Bush Administration sent me a certified letter 10 days before the Cannes Film Festival that I was under investigation for criminal and civil penalties," Moore said. >>>


That's just fantasy.
Other sources have revealed that Moore planned to go to Cuba from the beginning. The Smoking Gun website obtained a letter to Moore from the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) which stated that before filming even began, Goldflat Productions, which included Moore, applied to OFAC on October 12, 2006 for permission to travel to Cuba—not “to American soil” at Gitmo, but Castro's Cuba.

Also, statements by several 9/11 responders that were made to the New York Post confirmed that this promotional stunt to treat the responders with Cuban healthcare was planned by Moore and his film company before they left the US:


<<< Responders were told Cuban doctors had developed new techniques for treating lung cancer and other respiratory illness, and that health care in the communist country was free, according to those offered the two-week February trip. >>>


Sounds like visiting Cuba was planned beforehand to me, but I'm confused. Michael Moore wouldn't try to deceive people would he?

Time unbelievably backed up Moore's claims of centrism by crafting two paragraphs which claimed “Moore is firmly in the American mainstream” and is no longer a “radical bomb-thrower.” To prove this, Time delivered a Moore-worthy series of loose assumptions and unproven connections (which is not a compliment) when it tried to prove that Moore was right about all of the topics of his “documentaries” (sneer quotes mine), stating



<<< “he took on General Motors and no one listened...Today, 'they're near bankruptcy...(H)e tried to take on the culture of gun violence, and this year there was another deadly school shooting at Virginia Tech.” >>>


Compare this flattering and unquestioning review with the more honest and critical USA Today review which actually delved into Moore's typical deceptive filming practices and flawed claims that I blogged about at Newsbusters (link below). Too bad that this Time review just seemed to be part of the Michael Moore, Inc. and the Lions Gate “Sicko” corporate PR machine, which would, of course, by Moore's standards, be evil.

Contact Lynn with tips or complaints at: tvisgoodforyou2 AT yahoo DOT com

newsbusters.org

time.com

thesmokinggun.com

nypost.com

newsbusters.org



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)6/28/2007 12:09:05 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    Canadian doctors, once quiet on the issue of private 
health care, elected Brian Day as president of their
national association. Dr. Day is a leading critic of
Canadian medicare; he opened a private surgery hospital
and then challenged the government to shut it down. "This
is a country," Dr. Day said by way of explanation, "in
which dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week and
in which humans can wait two to three years."

Who's Really 'Sicko'

In Canada, dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week. Humans can wait two to three years.

BY DAVID GRATZER
The Wall Street Journal Editorial Page
Thursday, June 28, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT

TORONTO--"I haven't seen 'Sicko,' " says Avril Allen about the new Michael Moore documentary, which advocates socialized medicine for the United States. The film, which has been widely viewed on the Internet, and which will officially open in the U.S. and Canada on Friday, has been getting rave reviews. But Ms. Allen, a lawyer, has no plans to watch it. She's just too busy preparing to file suit against Ontario's provincial government about its health-care system next month.

Her client, Lindsay McCreith, would have had to wait for four months just to get an MRI, and then months more to see a neurologist for his malignant brain tumor. Instead, frustrated and ill, the retired auto-body shop owner traveled to Buffalo, N.Y., for a lifesaving surgery. Now he's suing for the right to opt out of Canada's government-run health care, which he considers dangerous.

Ms. Allen figures the lawsuit has a fighting chance: In 2005, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that "access to wait lists is not access to health care," striking down key Quebec laws that prohibited private medicine and private health insurance.

In the U.S., 83 House Democrats voted for a bill in 1993 calling for single-payer health care. That idea collapsed with HillaryCare and since then has existed on the fringes of the debate--winning praise from academics and pressure groups, but remaining largely out of the political discussion. Mr. Moore's documentary intends to change that, exposing millions to his argument that American health care is sick and socialized medicine is the cure.

It's not simply that Mr. Moore is wrong. His grand tour of public health care systems misses the big story: While he prescribes socialism, market-oriented reforms are percolating in cities from Stockholm to Saskatoon.

Mr. Moore goes to London, Ontario, where he notes that not a single patient has waited in the hospital emergency room more than 45 minutes. "It's a fabulous system," a woman explains. In Britain, he tours a hospital where patients marvel at their free care. A patient's husband explains: "It's not America." Humorously, Mr. Moore finds a cashier dispensing money to patients (for transportation). In France, a doctor explains the success of the health-care system with the old Marxist axiom: "You pay according to your means, and you receive according to your needs."

It's compelling material--I know because, born and raised in Canada, I used to believe in government-run health care. Then I was mugged by reality.



Consider, for instance, Mr. Moore's claim that ERs don't overcrowd in Canada. A Canadian government study recently found that only about half of patients are treated in a timely manner, as defined by local medical and hospital associations. "The research merely confirms anecdotal reports of interminable waits," reported a national newspaper. While people in rural areas seem to fare better, Toronto patients receive care in four hours on average; one in 10 patients waits more than a dozen hours.

This problem hit close to home last year: A relative, living in Winnipeg, nearly died of a strangulated bowel while lying on a stretcher for five hours, writhing in pain. To get the needed ultrasound, he was sent by ambulance to another hospital.

In Britain, the Department of Health recently acknowledged that one in eight patients wait more than a year for surgery. Around the time Mr. Moore was putting the finishing touches on his documentary, a hospital in Sutton Coldfield announced its new money-saving linen policy: Housekeeping will no longer change the bed sheets between patients, just turn them over. France's system failed so spectacularly in the summer heat of 2003 that 13,000 people died, largely of dehydration. Hospitals stopped answering the phones and ambulance attendants told people to fend for themselves.

With such problems, it's not surprising that people are looking for alternatives. Private clinics--some operating in a "gray zone" of the law--are now opening in Canada at a rate of about one per week.

Canadian doctors, once quiet on the issue of private health care, elected Brian Day as president of their national association. Dr. Day is a leading critic of Canadian medicare; he opened a private surgery hospital and then challenged the government to shut it down. "This is a country," Dr. Day said by way of explanation, "in which dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week and in which humans can wait two to three years."

Market reforms are catching on in Britain, too. For six decades, its socialist Labour Party scoffed at the very idea of private medicine, dismissing it as "Americanization." Today Labour favors privatization, promising to triple the number of private-sector surgical procedures provided within two years. The Labour government aspires to give patients a choice of four providers for surgeries, at least one of them private, and recently considered the contracting out of some primary-care services--perhaps even to American companies.

Other European countries follow this same path. In Sweden, after the latest privatizations, the government will contract out some 80% of Stockholm's primary care and 40% of total health services, including Stockholm's largest hospital. Beginning before the election of the new conservative chancellor, Germany enhanced insurance competition and turned state enterprises over to the private sector (including the majority of public hospitals). Even in Slovakia, a former Marxist country, privatizations are actively debated.

Under the weight of demographic shifts and strained by the limits of command-and-control economics, government-run health systems have turned out to be less than utopian. The stories are the same: dirty hospitals, poor standards and difficulty accessing modern drugs and tests.

Admittedly, the recent market reforms are gradual and controversial. But facts are facts, the reforms are real, and they represent a major trend in health care. What does Mr. Moore's documentary say about that? Nothing.

Dr. Gratzer, a practicing physician licensed in Canada and the U.S. and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, is the author of "The Cure: How Capitalism Can Save American Health Care" (Encounter, 2006).

opinionjournal.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/2/2007 4:15:32 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hat tip to Brumar89:

The Liberal Porn of Michael Moore

The problem

Let's say you have an inordinate need for cheeseburgers but, like Wimpy, find yourself constantly short of the cash needed to support your corpulence.

Let's say you are stuck in a dead-end town in a dead-end life. All you have to your name is a borrowed bunch of movie equipment and not much skill in making movies.

But what you do have is a gnawing hunger and a smidgen of insight into a list of what causes the all-American liberal knee to jerk: Corporations (Bad), Gun owners (Worse), George Bush (Pure evil), Poor People Getting Doctor Bills (Worst of all). You also know, through mere casual observation, that telling big, big lies in any of these or a host of other areas confirms the assumptions of the anointed, and that there are no consequences for lying on a large scale, only large rewards. Liberals love to be licked in their sensitive ideological areas.

Why not crank out some ham-fisted films based on these obvious propositions? After all, you've got nothing to lose and an Oscar to gain.

Get them up to your apartment with some bad corporations. Loosen their inhibitions a bit with a couple of hits off the "guns are bad" bong. Then strip them down to skivvies with flash cards of George Bush. They're ready for you now. Lower the lights.... well, actually, fade to black.... strip off any pretense to objectivity and truth (Easy to do for one so practiced as you).... and have your way with them in the dark. Millions of them.

Lose the foreplay. They're already primed. Just slam it into them. Go ahead. They like it rough. Don't use any "protection." You don't need it. Everybody's already positive.

When it's over they'll stagger out of that dark room and tell each other how good it felt. They may even come back for seconds. What's more they'll give you the money before you do them.

Count the take and then take out the list of the lies they love you made so long ago. What's next and who's next? Pick up the phone and get those cheeseburgers ordered from room service. It's a wonderful life.

Vanderleun
americandigest.org



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/10/2007 4:34:15 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hat tip to Dr. Sanity:



drsanity.blogspot.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/13/2007 1:02:41 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    [Moore] is practically the Leni Riefenstahl of socialism. 
Anyone in a country with government-provided health
insurance is portrayed as tripping through daisies to the
hospital, where everything is free and the care is
perfect. America, in contrast, is a vista of unrelieved
gloom. Moore is adept at the propagandist's art -- keep it
simple and keep it dishonest.

Michael Moore's "World of We"

By Rich Lowry
Townhall.com Columnists
Thursday, July 12, 2007

Michael Moore set out to make a movie attacking the American insurance industry and ended up attacking the American character. By the end of his movie "SiCKO," his plaint is less about American resistance to government-run health care than its overarching rejection of collectivism. As Moore puts it, everywhere else it's "a world of we," but here a "world of me."

His voice thus joins a vast, age-old chorus of left-wing bafflement and disillusion at American exceptionalism -- our national traits that have prevented the development of a statist politics along continental European lines. Moore's explanation for this phenomenon is typically twisted: Americans are saddled with debt from college loans and health care, and that keeps us from demanding French-style pampering from our government for fear of foreclosure by The Man.

Tellingly, Moore picks up this theory in an interview with Tony Benn, an old-school British socialist of the sort who simply doesn't exist in the U.S. Here, our left-wing politicians vote for war funding before they vote against it, always trimming to keep from rubbing too strongly against the American grain. Moore fervently wishes that grain were different, and he celebrates all countries where government has a vaster reach and tighter grip -- from Cuba to France.

He is practically the Leni Riefenstahl of socialism. Anyone in a country with government-provided health insurance is portrayed as tripping through daisies to the hospital, where everything is free and the care is perfect. America, in contrast, is a vista of unrelieved gloom. Moore is adept at the propagandist's art -- keep it simple and keep it dishonest.

You would never know that America ranks highest in the world in patient satisfaction, or that only about half of emergency-room patients in Canada get timely treatment. This is not to say that Moore doesn't highlight real problems in the American insurance system -- which is badly distorted by the fact that most people get their insurance through their employers -- but his complaint goes much deeper: Americans don't have the "free" things of the French, who not only get lots of paid vacation, but have government nannies come to their homes to do their laundry for them after they have children.

Moore hints at -- of course -- a conspiracy to try to keep us from liking the French for fear that we too will develop a taste for the good life on the government's dime. Unfortunately for Moore, it's worse than that. America has a deep-seated individualistic value system that, coupled with the lack of European-style class conflict, inhibited the rise of social democracy here. As one historian has put it, if you were to set out to design a society hostile to collectivism, "one could not have done much better than to implement the social development that has, mostly unplanned, constituted America."

This exceptionalism has its downsides -- our high rates of violence, for one -- but it also has created a extraordinarily dynamic and open society that can adjust to and thrive in the globalized economy in a way that sclerotic social democracies can't. Just as Moore is apotheosizing France, its people took to the polls in near-record numbers to elect a reformist president devoted to making them work harder and weaning them from cushy benefits. In this sense, Michael Moore is more French than the French.

He hails the street protests that engulf France every time the government threatens to take away some benefit. We don't match the French in demonstrations, but once established, our government programs are just as fiercely defended. Liberals agitate for more government programs knowing that they create their own self-perpetuating constituencies and chip away at our culture of self-reliance. For now, that culture is still robust, as American exceptionalism remains stubbornly exceptional.

If you really want sweeping French-style social-welfare programs and repressive tax rates, your only alternative is to, like the American expats Moore glorifies in his movie, move to France.

Rich Lowry is author of Legacy: Paying the Price for the Clinton Years .

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/18/2007 5:58:18 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael and Me

By John Stossel
Townhall.com Columnists
Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Michael Moore loves government.

OK, he doesn't love a government headed by George W. Bush, but he believes that once the Democrats are in charge, government will do a better job providing health care.

In his new movie, "Sicko," he praises government-controlled health care systems in Canada and Europe. He suggests that Americans pay more for health care but have a shorter life expectancy than people in other countries because our health care is driven "by profit."

He is wrong in so many ways.

First, life expectancy is no measure of a country's medical system. Lifestyle and culture matter more, and Americans are different.

Interviewing Moore for an upcoming health care special on "20/20," I said, "In America we kill each other more often. We shoot each other. We have more car accidents. Forgive me, more of us look like ... you."

He smiled at that, but still argued that that people live longer in Canada "because they never have to worry about paying to go see the doctor. That means at the first sign of being sick they go right away to the doctor cause they're not worrying about whether or not they can afford it."

Please.

Freedom brings anxiety, but its other rewards are so superior to passive care from a smothering government.

America's medical system has problems, but profit is the least of it. Government mandates, overregulation and a tax code that pushes employer-paid health insurance prevent the free market from performing its efficient miracles. Six out of seven health-care dollars are spent by third parties. That kills the market. Patients rarely shop around, and doctors rarely compete on price or service.

Moore told me, "Government can do things right. ... My dad gets his Social Security check every month. Comes not only every month, it comes on the same day through the so-called 'dilapidated' U.S. mail. ... [A]sk your grandparents what they think of Medicare. Although it has its flaws, although it may be underfunded, it's a much better program than the HMO that somebody has."

Underfunded? Medicare has a 75-year $34 trillion unfunded liability! Its costs are growing faster than inflation. Social Security has a 75-year $5 trillion unfunded liability. These are Ponzi schemes that will be bankrupt before Moore reaches retirement age. The U.S. mail manages to deliver his dad's checks, but compare its performance to FedEx or UPS. The Post Office said it wasn't possible to deliver packages overnight.

I want FedEx health care: innovation, new cancer treatments, hip replacements and pain relief. We get that from private-sector competition, not government lethargy.

Moore said, "You don't introduce profit into your city water department."

He's wrong about that, too. As I wrote in "Give Me a Break", Jersey City, New Jersey's water tasted foul and failed safety tests. City workers said there wasn't much they could do. In fact, water prices would have to be raised ... just to maintain the lousy service they had.

So Jersey City turned its water system over to a for-profit company. Within months it had fixed the pipes government workers said couldn't be fixed, and for the first time in years, Jersey City's water met the highest cleanliness standard. Taxpayers saved $35 million.

The private company could do it better and cheaper because their skills were honed by constant competition.

Private competitors innovate or die. Government workers do what they did last year. That's why I want the private sector to provide my health care. Pursuit of profit will give us our best medicines and medical devices. I'll pay you $1,000 if you can name one thing government does more efficiently than the private sector.

Moore laughed at me, saying, "You are, like, so Thirteenth Century," but he conceded that America's founding libertarian philosophy has made us a rich and innovative country. "Look at everything we've invented," he told me. "I say to my British friends, can you tell me something you invented in the last 50 years. I mean, what have you given us?"

"Can they come up with anything?" I asked.

"No, they have a hard time. That can-do spirit served us well in building this country."

Served? It still does. And will -- if government would just get out of the way.


John Stossel is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/18/2007 7:00:51 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    The demise of "Sicko" has created a real opportunity for 
opponents of socialized medicine to grab hold of the
health care issue and champion reforms that actually will
appeal to Americans — more freedom of choice for
consumers, more competition, less costly red tape, real
liability reform.

'Sicko' On Life Support

By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted Tuesday, July 17, 2007 4:30 PM PT

Health Care: Moviegoers who were urged to "send a message" by seeing Michael Moore's "Sicko" have stayed away in droves. Now the film that was supposed to spark a health care revolution is barely breathing.

Few movies have gotten as much free advance publicity as "Sicko." Seemingly endless media coverage predicted it would change the terms of the health care debate, galvanize a public sick of the nation's broken health care system, bust down industry roadblocks to real reform. The New York Times said the movie "was likely to have broad political impact."

Its producers treated "Sicko" like a political campaign, tapping Clinton administration veteran Chris Lehane to run the publicity effort. Moore was everywhere prior to its release, testifying before Congress, heading up rallies and mounting publicity stunts, like inviting 900 health care lobbyists to a special screening.

All this — combined with a muscular advertising campaign, the fact that Moore had a certifiable hit in 2004 with "Fahrenheit 9/11" ($119 million in box office receipts), and the supposed mood of the public — should have guaranteed the success of "Sicko." As Moore put it, "Every time I make a film, it breaks the last record."

But a funny thing happened on the way to the Moore-inspired national uprising: "Sicko" is bombing — financially and politically. After three weeks in wide release, it has managed to scrape together just $15.8 million in box office receipts. For most documentaries, that would be a notable take. But given the expectations, this is an enormous failure.

Box Office Mojo, which tracks ticket sales, notes that the movie will struggle to match "Bowling for Columbine," Moore's ill-fated call for stricter gun control laws.

Democrats, meanwhile, are stepping back from the movie's main message — that the nation's health care system is so corrupt that only a complete government takeover will suffice.

As the Los Angeles Times put it, " 'Sicko' is creating an awkward situation for leading Democratic presidential candidates." "Instead of greeting the film with hosannas or challenging it head-on," it said, "(they) [THEY]have sidestepped direct comment." And shortly after the movie opened, the Washington Post headlined a story "For Democrats, Pragmatism on Universal Health Care."

All this has left Moore acting more unhinged than usual.
He was last seen losing it on CNN, which had the temerity to run a piece challenging Moore's "Sicko" facts. There he was, pathetically yelling at Wolf Blitzer about how unfair the network has been to him and insinuating that CNN is in the pocket of Big Pharma.

The demise of "Sicko" has created a real opportunity for opponents of socialized medicine to grab hold of the health care issue and champion reforms that actually will appeal to Americans — more freedom of choice for consumers, more competition, less costly red tape, real liability reform.

As we've argued in the past, we're in a war over the future of health care. Moore and his troops launched the first salvo, and it failed. Now it's time for a credible counterattack.

ibdeditorials.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)7/23/2007 5:06:39 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
SICKO SOCIALISM

By Dr. Sanity

I hear Michael Moore is filming a new movie....



(see more of Eric Allie's cartoons here)
townhall.com

drsanity.blogspot.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)8/6/2007 6:05:59 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Video: The REAL Michael Moore

New documentary by filmmaker's childhood friend paints a devastating portrait

foxnews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)10/2/2009 9:33:56 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Leftist Capitalism

Investor's Business Daily Edieorials
Posted 10/01/2009 07:04 PM ET

Hypocrisy: Apart from a healthy appetite, what do the 1.3-billion-strong Red Chinese have in common with filmmaker Michael Moore? Living a Marxist creed while practicing capitalism.


The paradox of New York City, home to Wall Street, arranging for the Empire State Building to shimmer in the red and yellow of the communist Chinese flag to celebrate 60 years of tyranny is bad enough.

What about a documentary filmmaker who has lined his pockets with millions by tearing down a corporate CEO, celebrating Fidel Castro's Cuba and now directly savaging America's free-market system in his latest flick, "Capitalism: A Love Story"?

Mainland China may have long since toned down its state-sanctioned cult of personality surrounding the greatest murderer in world history, Mao Zedong. But as far as political freedoms go, it remains very much a communist country.

Its adoption of capitalist economics, however, has turned it into an economic powerhouse, though you'll never hear its safely entrenched dictators admit as much.

By the same token, you'll never see Michael Moore doff his ever-present baseball cap to the economic freedom that brought him a fortune. "Capitalism did nothing for me," he claimed as he entered the movie house in Washington, D.C., where his film premiered Tuesday night.

Moore was asked about amassing "a fortune of over $50 million," thanks to filmgoers shelling out cash to capitalist theater chains and capitalist DVD stores in capitalist countries.

He complained of having to "pretty much beg, borrow and steal," that "the system is not set up to help somebody from the working class make a movie like this and get the truth out there," and that Disney "tried to kill" his highest-grossing movie, "Fahrenheit 9/11," for which he reportedly got $21 million.

Moore's health care documentary, "Sicko" — for which he took half the profit, according to Vanity Fair — ends with Americans arriving in communist Cuba, where they finally get the care they desperately need.

If you think that story rings true, just give it a try sometime.

Moore first came to notice in 1989 for "Roger and Me," in which he lambasted General Motors CEO Roger Smith. Fortune magazine estimates his films have grossed more than $300 million.

A common thread runs through such self-serving hypocrisy. For Beijing to admit that freedom is the key to China's success would threaten its rulers' permanent power.

For Michael Moore to admit he's the beneficiary of capitalism would expose his slickly produced propaganda as just hot air.

investors.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)10/2/2009 9:50:59 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Capitalism is Evil!

    

Steve Breen from Creators Syndicate

creators.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)10/6/2009 4:31:36 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael Moore, Closet Supply-Sider

By PETER SCHWEIZER
Investor's Business Daily
Posted 10/05/2009 06:11 PM ET

Michael Moore is at it again, attacking capitalism and corporate America, this time with the film "Capitalism: A Love Story." Capitalism is "legalized greed," and "anti-Jesus," he says. And he is sick and tired of special tax breaks for corporations.

Or is he?

Moore has found a tax break for corporations he actually likes. And his arguments in favor of it sound more like they're coming from a supply-sider than the populist he professes to be.

Michigan, where Moore lives, offers the most generous tax breaks and subsidies for film producers in the country. For every dollar you spend making a movie in Michigan, taxpayers will give you back 42 cents. Moore actually relocated his postproduction team from New York City to Michigan just to take advantage of these tax credits.

But Moore is not just a recipient of these tax credits. His hypocrisy goes deeper.
As a member of the Michigan Film Office Advisory Council he has been a cheerleader for them. Appointed to the post by Gov. Jennifer Granholm in September 2008, Moore sees himself as an ambassador who will help bring the film business into the state.

And how does he profess to bring the film business to Michigan? By offering it tax breaks.

In a revealing two-hour interview with the Michigan weekly Northern Express, Moore is candid about his support for tax credits (he calls them "incentives") that he disdains for any other business.
Listen to him recount a conversation with his agent and Hollywood uberliberal Ari Emanuel when the tax credits were first introduced in early 2008:

"When the new film incentives were established, some in Hollywood said that it was an Internet rumor," he told the paper's Rick Coates. "My agent Ari Emanuel called and asked if this was real. I told him, yes, it is real, and he responded, 'I am getting this out to all of my clients because no state has anything close to this.'"

Apparently there is nothing like a generous tax credit to get Hollywood liberals motivated.

Moore then goes on to report on the success of the program. "Just after the incentives went into effect, about a dozen projects came into play," he said. "Then two months ago we were at 20, and as of today I am aware of 32 projects being considered for Michigan." Tax credits apparently spur growth.

But in this instance, Moore's generous tax credits amount to the working class in Michigan paying taxes to subsidize high-paying Hollywood jobs. Moore admits this, explaining that people can make $52,000 in six months with these jobs.

My staff usually takes off a year after working a year because they have made the equivalent of two or three years' worth of wages in one year," he brags. "So then you have free time to maybe write that book you wanted or open that business you dreamed of."


This is no doubt cold comfort to a Michigan middle class just trying to make ends meet with double-digit unemployment. But never mind. Moore is proud of the fact that Michigan has "the best incentive program anywhere" for Hollywood studios.

Champion of the working man, always willing to stick it to corporate America, Moore then suddenly offers choice advice to his fellow citizens on how to deal with his Hollywood corporate friends. "When Hollywood comes calling, do not jack up your prices, or they will not be back," he told the paper.

These generous tax credits mean that Michigan taxpayers are writing large checks to major Hollywood studios.

For example,
taxpayers sent $5.7 million to California-based Parallel Media for shooting "High School," a school stoner film, in the town of Howell. According to the Michigan Film Office 2008 annual report, taxpayers paid out close to $48 million to Hollywood studios to create 2,800 part-time jobs.

According to Moore, these tax incentives — imagine it! — "will mean jobs and money being pulled into Michigan."

That's a funny thing to say, given that Moore always professes to hate tax cuts and tax credits for corporations. But remember, Michael Moore hates capitalism and corporate welfare. He really does. He told us so on camera.

• Schweizer is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and author of the just-released "Architects of Ruin: How Big Government Liberals Wrecked the Global Economy — And How They Will Do It Again If No One Stops Them" (Harper).

investors.com



To: Sully- who wrote (9274)3/6/2010 4:00:22 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Michael Moore: 250,000 Killed in Haiti Because It’s an Unregulated ‘Republican’s Paradise’

By Brent Baker
NewsBusters.org

Left-wing filmmaker Michael Moore, appearing on Friday night’s Real Time with Bill Maher on HBO to plug the DVD release of his Capitalism: A Love Story screed, cited the 250,000 killed in Haiti, which he snidely described as an unregulated “Republican’s paradise,” as an apt analogy to justify further regulation of U.S. banks.

Live via satellite from Manhattan, Moore spouted:


<<< Chile had an earthquake this past week that was 500 times greater than the earthquake in Haiti. But here's the big difference. In Chile, they have various -- very serious regulations when it comes to building codes. So a thousand people died, sadly, but a thousand people died with a 500 times greater earthquake. And in Haiti, where there are no building codes, no regulations -- a Republican’s paradise -- a quarter of a million people died. >>>

Haiti could better be characterized as an impoverished nation beset for decades by a corrupt socialist government.


newsbusters.org