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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (57502)1/11/2009 12:41:05 PM
From: Ann Corrigan1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224756
 
2009 predictions: 'I'd Rather be Waterboarding' and 'An Inconvenient Ice Age'

by Joseph Lindsey

I had silently moved through Hollywood as an actor and screenwriter for more than fifteen years before I left. Most of that time was spent amongst people I liked and some I even loved, and still do. However, none of them did I agree with when it came to the topic of politics and how the majority thinking in Hollywood affected the work I did, was asked to do, and the movies that so many in this country are forced to sit through.

I spent my days with the shades drawn on sunny L.A. mornings reading The Weekly Standard , and nights watching Fox News with the sound turned down. But that’s not why I left. I left because I found that when I wasn’t able to be around and talk openly with like-minded people my creativity felt stifled, dishonest. I found myself just bobbing my head in silent agreement like a performing monkey when all I really wanted to do was have an open minded, calm, conversation about the world, especially after 9/11.

I’m not here to be cruel; I don’t hate people on the left, I don’t wish them to have heart attacks, die in office or drop dead on their actors’ mark. I just feel my ideas and my work are more interesting when challenged in an open minded, spiritually enlightened, compassionate way. I use those Hollywood buzz words because if you want Hollywood to hear you; you have to speak their language. You can’t invade a foreign land and then ask them to speak English, well, not right away anyway. With Big Hollywood I now have a “safe place” like I did as a kid, thumb in mouth, blanket over my head and a GI Joe doll in hand.

The thing I find most disturbing these days is the dangerous mixture of pop culture and politics aimed in only one direction. Because of that, the line between the Hollywood mouthpieces and Washington D.C. public servants continues to blur into one scary hybrid, making it hard to tell who’s “Dancing with the Stars” and who’s handing out the bailouts. So, armed with that knowledge, I bring to you my list of predictions for this Chimera in 2009. They’re sure to bring a thrill up your leg, or a chill down your spine:

1. Alec Baldwin will walk away from his mortgage on a condo in Canada and look to buy a townhouse in Georgetown with his eye on a government seat, one he hopes to just buy in on, or be appointed to because of his last name.

2. LeRoy Neiman will be appointed to the cabinet position of Secretary of Obama Murals and be sent out across America to tag any building seven stories or higher.

3. Nancy Pelosi will send 100,000.00 copies of Susan Faludis’ book Backlash to the women of Afghanistan; she’ll then receive an award at Premiere Magazine’s Women in Hollywood Awards for being the one who liberated the women of Afghanistan.

4. Now that they can stay in America, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins will ask for their money back from Rosetta Stone for those Italian lessons they took.

5. Fidel Castro will die and at his funeral attendees will include 12 Oscar winners, 7 Grammy winners, 3 living dictators, 4 Nobel Prize winners and one former US President stopping by on his way to build housing for Hamas.

6. Chris Matthews will guest star on Grey’s Anatomy as a mental patient with a permanent thrill up his leg.

7. Rahm Emanuel will work with Industrial Light and Magic on just how his Commander in Chief can “slow the rise of the oceans and heal the planet.”

8. Al Gore will make a sequel to An Inconvenient Truth titled, An Inconvenient Ice Age. In it he will outline how recent global cooling has come about because of global warming, Y2K and Sky Lab almost falling on us in 1979. It will be animated, direct by Seth MacFarlane, voiced by Leonardo Dicaprio, Rosie O’Donnell, Bill Maher, Jon Stewart and Charlize Theron, with a soundtrack by Bruce Springsteen.

9. Young Hollywood celebrities will be seen wearing t-shirts that say “I’d Rather Be Waterboarding,” when waterboarding becomes all the rage. They’ll say it’s not torture if performed between consenting adults and done with vodka laced Red Bull.

10. President Obama will take walking on water lessons from magician Chris Angel at the MGM Grand.

Those I’m pretty sure of, as for the rest of this gestating beast, we’ll just have to wait and see what it does.
bighollywood.breitbart.com



To: Hope Praytochange who wrote (57502)1/11/2009 3:20:49 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 224756
 
Disgraceful that it has come to this for Britain's Jewish population. Liberalism clouds moral judgement over time:

Gaza is alienating Britain's Jews

Francesca Segal, The Observer, 11 January 2009

As a British Jew, growing antisemitism makes me feel that I am no longer safe. I am a secular, liberal, identifying British Jew. My parents would have taken great pleasure if my acting talents had landed me a starring role in the primary school nativity play; on Christmas Day, we gather at home eating smoked salmon bagels and mince pies. There is no conflict whatsoever between my religion and nationality. On the contrary, they have always supported and echoed one another in terms of the values and moral structure they promote. Judaism has taught me to value liberalism, education, tolerance, family and charity. All Jewish religious services and celebrations include a heartfelt toast to the Queen, because Jews in this country have felt safe, well-assimilated and, most of all, grateful.

In August 2001, I turned 21 and my parents gave me a Star of David necklace. Then a month later, the world changed and my mother, with remarkable foresight, began her campaign to rescind the gift, begging me to take it off because she was frightened it would make me a target in the wake of mounting evidence that fanatical Islamism was tightening its grip on the country. My argument was always the same - when I am no longer safe being identifiably Jewish on the tube, I don't want to live in England.

Now it's happening and I am devastated. It was bluster. I am resolutely, irreducibly British. I love Marmite and Labradors and Sunday lunch. If you step on my foot, I will reflexively apologise. New York, where I will go if I have to leave the UK, does not feel like home for me nor, I suspect, could it ever. But as the British establishment sides with the appeasing of Islamism at home and abroad and as the word Zionism is increasingly bastardised, hijacked by a new definition comprising traditional antisemitic libels and demonising conspiracy theories, and as the liberal media and campaigning groups single out Israel disproportionately among all other countries for criticism, perpetuating the myth that Israel is responsible for mushrooming anti-western sentiment, I feel increasingly that I cannot stay.

My little sister arrived back at her university last week to discover buildings had been daubed with antisemitic graffiti. Across north London, the same scrawled vitriol has been appearing - "Jihad to Israel", frequently accompanied by the message: "Kill Jews."

Hamas' leader Mahmoud Zahar has now declared Jewish children worldwide as "legitimate targets" and although Fleet Street's recent Hamas revisionism made his statement easy to miss, it seems that plenty of others have taken note. The Community Security Trust has dealt with more than 50 antisemitic incidents in the UK in the last two weeks, including an arson attack on a synagogue, a massive spike in violence since the current operation began in Gaza.

"Normally, in that period we'd expect about a dozen," their press officer explained to me, but what a staggering and unacceptable base rate. The average number of antisemitic attacks in a civilised western country should be zero. There has been a sea change in Europe and it's terrifying.

Comments are now closed on this entry.
11 Jan 09, 11:19am (about 9 hours ago)
Very sorry to read this: though I can't say I'm surprised. If you read the intemperate remarks of Ed Husain, who likes to pose as a pro-Western uber-moderate, you realise how far obsession with Israel/Palestine has now gone. And it is an obsession. Just compare the actions of Israel - whatever you think about them - with what has been going on in, for example, the Congo: the REAL massacres, the rapes, the genuine barabarity, and then ask yourself: why isn't there one hundredth of the anger about those events? There's pity, and occasional media notice, but no real anger of the type demonstrated in London yesterday. If it isn't anti-semitism that fuels the anger over Palestine, it's hard to see what it is.

guardian.co.uk