Joe Dees
Sent:
14 July 2004 22:43

 

You'd think from watching the movie that Saddam's Iraq was a peaceful pastoral place filled with shiny happy kite-flying people, with no mention of the torture chambers and rape rooms and mass graves, or of his penchant for invading his neighbors.  You'd also think that Bin Laden's relatives were prime suspects in 9/11 and were flown out of the FBI's reach at Bush' behest, when in actuality they renounced the guy long ago, the FBI interviewed everyone they wanted to prior to the flight, and the flight itself was approved by Richard Clarke, and Bush was never asked.  When a congressman was asked if he had sons in the military, his answer that he had two nephews in Iraq was cut from the piece.   There are so many more cheap shots and deceptions in the movie that it has taken people a lot of time to list them, but I did post such a list, in:

http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=60;action=display;threadid=30623

 

[Blunderov] Hey there Joe! Haven’t seen the movie – does it mention how Saddam became such a strongman in the region because the USA deliberately set him up to be just that? And supplied him with ‘WMD’ to use against Iran? And looked the other way when he did just that? The rank hypocrisy of it all…the way I see it, no shot is too cheap to take under the circumstances.

 

On a more general note ‘Show me someone who is not an immigrant and I’ll go out and say a prayer for him’. What I mean is that any movie is a personal view and can never claim to be objective. The act of putting a frame around something is simultaneously the act of excluding everything else. The camera ALWAYS lies

 

I tend to agree that Moore makes too much (I’ve read his books) of the Saudi connection. Realistically, it seems to me that it is only natural that there should be high level connections and business interests between the USA and the Saudis. I don’t really see what the fuss is all about in this regard.

 

Toodle Pip

Blunderov