Most ordinary hard-working Americans will never
pay to see Michael Moore`s Oscar nominated Bowling for
Columbine. For those of us who have, the anger at the deceit in
the portrayal of virtually every facet of the film is
palpable.
Even the title harbors a lie. According to Dan
Lyons of Forbes magazine, police later said the murderers, who
took the lives of 12 students and a teacher at Columbine High School
in Littleton, Cob., on April 20, 1999, didn`t attend their bowling
class that awful day, as Moore suggests.
Hailing the film as presenting "the horrors of gun
violence and the destructive attitude within the NRA` Handgun Control
Inc.`s Sarah Brady puffed Moore`s Oscar nomination, saying "Michael`s
candid interviews with gun enthusiasts and with NRA`s Charlton Heston
illuminated how far we have to go to reach our vision of an America
free from gun violence."
But Brady and the rest of the chattering classes
have been deceived. Bowling for Columbine is not so much about
trashing guns as it is about trashing America--and the spirit of
Americans.
Moore told The UCLA Daily Bruin on Oct. 11,
2002: "Ultimately, this film is not about guns, its not about school
shootings. You could make a documentary about how horrible the gun
problem is, but I don`t care about that."
What he does care about is what he calls exposing
"the dark side of the American soul."
To CBS` 60 Minutes, Moore put it another
way, "I think we have, like, a shared mental illness, like, a
collective mental illness when it comes to how we view the
world."
And he told CNBC`s Tim Russert, "Guns don`t kill
people, Americans kill people." He told Russert this was caused by,
"that American ethic, that mean spiritedness that wants to beat up on
the poor."
Moore`s Bowling for Columbine is a rant
against the soul of a whole people--a rant laced with deceit. Gun
ownership just happens to be the invisibility cloak he donned to hide
the true meaning of the film.
Nowhere is that more apparent than when Moore
sandbags ailing NRA President Charlton Heston; first by tricking him
into thinking this would be a fair interview by a fellow NRA member,
then by increasingly hostile, in-your-face questions nobody could
answer. Moore says the segment was filmed in early 2001, just days
after he purchased an NRA Life membership on Dec. 19,
2000.
This segment--at the film`s closing--begins with
Moore talking with Heston on a gate intercom outside the NRA
president`s home: "I`m making a documentary about the whole gun issue
and I`m a member of the NRA. I thought maybe we could talk a little
bit." says Moore.
Heston graciously says he`ll visit with him
tomorrow. Moore cuts to the same scene the following morning. This
time, Heston meets him, graciously offers his hand and escorts the
scruffy Moore into his home.
Once inside, Moore tells him he`s a Life member of
NRA and asks, "do you have guns in the house?" It`s not a question
any real NRA member would ask. From this rude inquiry, it degenerates
into an increasingly hostile inquisition.
Halfway through the badgering interview, Heston
politely attempts to bow out. But Moore simply won`t let
up.
"I come from Flint, Mich., and last year a little
6-year-old boy took a gun into a classroom and shot a 6-year-old
girl. After that happened you came to Flint and held
a big political rally . . .
"Did you feel it was at all insensitive to the
fact that the community had just gone through
this?..."
"You think maybe you`d just like to apologize to
the people in Flint for doing that at that time?"
Heston is incredulous: "You want me to apologize
to the people in Flint?"
"Or to the people in Columbine for coming after
their horrible tragedy. Why do you come to these places after they
have these horrible tragedies?"
Heston stands . . . and Moore raises his voice,
"I`m a member of your group here."
The NRA president walks out of his own home,
pursued by Moore who is now holding up a photo of the little girl
murdered in Flint. He`s taunting Heston to his back.
The camera holds on Heston, and Moore leaves the
photo at the doorstep. Outside the gate Moore says, "I left the
Heston Estate in Beverly Hills and walked back into the real
world--an America living and breathing in fear. . ."
Moore`s demand for an "apology" is based on a huge
lie targeting Heston and the NRA--a lie that punctuates the
film.
Everything about this assertion is fabricated.
Earlier in the film, he sets up his bullying Heston interview using
footage of something that never happened.
At the end of a horrifying segment showing
security camera videos of Columbine murderers Kevin Harris and Dylan
Klebold gunning down classmates, we see news clips of sobbing
teenagers. Moore cuts to footage of NRA President Charlton Heston`s
famous oration signature holding a flintlock rifle above his head and
saying, "... from my cold, dead hands."
Here Moore intones: "Just to days after the
Columbine killings--despite the pleas of a community in mourning
-Charlton Heston came to Denver and held a large pro-gun rally for
the National Rifle Association."
Actually, Heston never said those words in Denver.
The footage of Heston with the rifle is from another event held a
year later in Charlotte, NC. (In fact, the first part of Heston`s
statement was spliced from an entirely different appearance--that one
not in Denver, either.) Moore`s visual assertion is a complete
fraud.
Further, there was no such thing as a "rally"
after the tragic mass murder at Columbine.
Two weeks following the murders, the NRA held its
annual corporate meetings, which had been scheduled there since
February 1995, in Denver. Normally, the yearly convention includes
exhibits, an annual banquet and many smaller events for the
entertainment and education of members. All were canceled in
deference to the grief over the murders--a grief shared by NRA
members.
Only those sessions required by NRA bylaws were
held, including the Annual Meeting of Members. At that meeting, Mr.
Heston`s speech was somber, and in all presentations there great
dignity and honor were exhibited by everyone who spoke about the
victims of Columbine.
The real story of the meeting was of grown
men--cowboys and tough, working men--sitting, heads bowed, brushing
away tears at the thought of the tragedy. It was not a rally, but
more of a memorial. The only "rally" was a raucous demonstration held
by the Million Mom March across the street.
As for Flint, what did Moore say? ". . . the
community that had just gone through this . . . doing that at that
time . . ."
The only rally that occurred in Flint was eight
months alter time tragedy, a political rally to support George W.
Bush`s candidacy--one among many multi-state appearances. Flint was
critical to the campaign because of its high dual union/NRA
membership. Yet Moore leaves viewers believing that NRA showed up the
day after the shooting and held a pep rally.
If Moore`s bullying treatment of Heston on screen
is dishonest, small and mean, what Moore left out was even worse. He
told commingsoon.net--an online magazine--on Oct. 30,
2002:
"The reason we were in L.A. was because we went
out to the gun manufacturer that made the Saturday Night Special that
killed the little girl in Flint. So, I wanted to trace the gun back
to where it was originally made. It was one of the ideas for the film
that didn`t end up in the film, but that`s why we were Out here
shooting. And I had got that gun, the exact model and everything and
I wanted to present the gun to him as a present. I don`t want to
threaten him with a gun because I don`t want him to think he`s got a
gun pointed at him, so I`m just holding up in a paper bag and
said,`Mr. Heston, 1 also want to give you the gun, the same kind of
gun that killed this little girl.` In the editing room, I just
thought, `That`s harsh.` It`s rough enough just watching what I`m
already doing. I mean, he`s an old man and he`s recovering from
hip-replacement surgery, so he`s walking very hard. I`m a human
being. I disagree with him politically, but I feel for him as a
person. I treated him with respect . . ."
Respect? It was nothing more than a hatchet job
based upon a lie, and Moore knows that.
The entire "gun violence` theme of Moore`s film is
built around Columbine and Flint--events which Moore colors and
shades with dishonesty and guile by using innuendo, ignoring
critically important facts, changing the timeline to create a false
chronology and then salting it all down with outright
lies.
Here`s another example.
After showing the security video montage of the
Columbine Murders Moore says, "It is believed that all of the guns
that they used were all legally purchased at gun stores and gun
shows
In truth, Harris and Kiebold had violated at least
20 different state and federal firearms laws.
Moore never mentions that the murderers had
threatened other kids, and that the threats were ignored. And he
never explores the fact that they had made a film of their own--a
school-project video where the future murderers in black trench coats
moved through the halls of the school pretending to gun down
classmates.
Moore never mentions anything except that American
society, American culture and American values are solely to blame for
the acts of these two cold-blooded killers.
Moore goes to the Lockheed Martin plant in
Littleton and with a backdrop of huge rocket boosters says, "So you
don`t think our kids say to themselves, `Dad goes off to the factory
every day, he builds missiles of mass destruction. What`s the
difference between that mass destruction and the mass destruction
over at Columbine High School?"
But these "missiles" were actually rocket boosters
used in placing TV satellites in orbit, a fact ferreted out by Forbes
magazine.
Moore then cuts to a montage of what he considers
American foreign policy atrocities with headlines superimposed over
stock black and white news footage. With a soundtrack of Louis
Armstrong singing "It`s a Wonderful World" Moore blithely credits
America with killing or murdering millions of people--in Vietnam, El
Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama.
Some of the headlines read:
"1990: Iraq invades Kuwait with weapons from
the U.S." (The footage here is of a Soviet armored personnel
carrier)
"1991 U. S. enters Iraq"
"Bush reinstates dictator of Kuwait"
"1991 to present: American planes bomb Iraq on a
weekly basis"
"UN estimates 500,000 Iraqi children die from
bombing and sanctions"
"2000-01: U.S. gives Taliban-ruled Afghanistan
$245 million in `aid`" (The truth is "aid" given to the Taliban came
via the United Nations as food aid to overcome an impending
famine.)
The final headline says: Sept. 11, 2001: Osama bin
Laden used expert CIA training to murder 3,000 people.
So there it is. It`s all our fault. The tragedy of
Sept. 11 is on each of our heads as Americans. According to Moore, we
are all guilty.
This is all sweet music if you are a radical
revolutionary spitting on Old Glory or if you are a militant Islamic
fundamentalist looking for something to shore up your hatred of
America. Moore might as well call America the Great Satan.
Moore`s extremely brief actual Columbine segment
is sandwiched between video of his outrage at being free to buy a
hunting rifle at a bank as a premium for opening a long-term CD; then
to footage of Moore hanging out and sounding agreeable with the
Michigan Militia.
There`s also an interview with the truly strange
brother of Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols, a disturbed individual
who purportedly puts a .44 Mag to his head at one point. This is what
Sarah Brady cynically refers to as "interviews with gun
enthusiasts`
The film even contains a snippet about a hunter
who was shot after tying his rifle to his dog. Bowling for
Columbine shows the actual video of the cute beagle pup togged
out in an orange safety vest with the rifle strapped on.
Mike Pesca, WNYC Radio`s producer-at-large, one of
the few members of the mainstream media to take even a cursory look
at Moore`s "facts` called Michigan hunter safety authorities and
discovered the footage of the beagle was faked. But the phony clip
serves well Moore`s purpose--to paint American hunters as
morons.
Another low point of this so-called "documentary"
is a segment from South Park, which anti-gunner Brady simply
called "a cartoon skit representing the history of guns in America."
It is, in fact, much broader than that. Titled "A Brief History of
the United States of America` it mirrors Moore`s theme about fear
driving America.
"And in 1871 when the (Ku Klux) Klan became an
illegal terrorist organization, another group was founded--the
National Rifle Association. Soon politicians passed one of the
first gun laws making it illegal for any black person to own one.
It was a great year for America, the KKK and the
NRA."
At this point in the voice-over, a cartoon NRA
member pours gasoline at the base of a cross, while a cartoon
Klansman watches with an evil grin.
"Of course they had nothing to do with each other,
and this was just a coincidence."
Under these words, the cartoon Klansman torches
the gas and the cross is burning, while the toon NRA member
grins.
The narrative continues. . . "One group legally
promoted responsible gun ownership, and the other group shot and
lynched black people."
So-called critics used words like
"hilarious"rollicking" and "fun" to describe this slanderous
outrage.
Moore`s obsession with racism permeates his view
of America and especially his take on Flint.
On Feb. 29, 2000, the nation and the world was
shocked by the murder of 6-year-old Kayla Rolland at her school by a
6-year-old classmate.
Headlines from the March 1, 2000, Detroit Free
Press--which covered every aspect of the case in depth--told the
story: "Boy`s home `shameful`--Police find drugs in trash-strewn
residence.` The lead of that story read, "The first grader started
his days amid drugs, stolen guns, ammunition and scattered trash at
his uncle`s home, where he and his 8-year-old brother were left by
their mother a week ago."
Or this: "The family portrait: Crack, crime and
jail--Boy`s pattern was cut by generations before."
The story said, "The boy`s father, Dedric Owens,
is in jail for a parole violation. So is an uncle, Sir-Marcus
Winfrey, on a stolen property warrant. The boy`s mother, Tamarla
Owens, is `involved with drugs` and allegedly abused the boy`s older
brother, according to court filings."
These were critical elements to understanding why
this terrible event happened. But not one word of any of this sad
depravity made it into Moore`s coverage. Instead, Moore launches into
a truly weird rap about the conditions that led to the 6-year-old
pulling the trigger.
"Tamarla Owens was the mother of the 6-year-old
boy," Moore says in the film. "In order to get food stamps and health
care for her children, Tamarla was forced to work as part of the
state of Michigan`s welfare to work program.
"This program was so successful in tossing poor
people off welfare that its founder, Gerald Miller, was soon hired by
the number one firm in the nation that states turned to privatize
their welfare systems. That firm was Lockheed Martin."
"With the cold war over and no enemy left to
frighten the public, Lockheed had found the perfect way to diversify
and the perfect way to profit from the people`s fears with an enemy
much closer to home--the black mothers like Tamarla
Owens."
This is his connection between Columbine and Flint
and the military industrial complex--the engine Moore believes is
running the Great Satan. And it`s his connection to white
racism.
The film didn`t include a word about what the
mainstream media had been reporting worldwide--just a riff about
workfare, fear and race. Nothing about drugs, stolen guns, the crack
house where the kid stayed.
Why would Moore leave these salient facts out? And
where did Moore`s workfare rant come from?
Perusing a well-known Web search
engine--Google--perhaps provides the answer. Type in the string,
"Tamarla Owens" and you get a list of articles with headlines from
the Detroit Free Press, the Associated Press and newspapers
worldwide, all echoing the horrible truth about the abusive
conditions the child/murderer lived under.
But there is one that jumps off the page--one that
is much different than the others. The headline reads:
"Michigan school shooting: a tragic consequence of
U.S. welfare `reform.`"
Click on the link and you find the article. There
it is--point by point identical to Moore`s thesis. And at the top of
the article is a masthead: World Socialist Web site. The date on the
piece is April 28, 2000.
That site has a very good internal search engine. Type in "Littleton"
and you get a series of articles and editorials on the Columbine
murders--all saying precisely what Moore says about that as
well.
The article, "A nation at war . . . with itself`
refers to "the corrosive impact on this society of the death and
destruction that America visits upon people beyond its
borders."
Another article, "the Columbine High School
massacre: American Pastoral . . . American Berserk" says, "The deed
itself represented an extreme application of the selfish and inhuman
attitudes that are commonplace in American society today . . .
."
That is exactly what Moore says in his movie, and
it is what he says consistently in interviews, both before and
since.
If you wonder who these seers are who share
Michael Moore`s vision, click on the link, "About WSWS." Here`s what
you get:
"The World Socialist Web site is the Internet
center of the International Committee of the Fourth International
(ICFI) . . . The standpoint of this Web site is one of revolutionary
opposition to the capitalist market system. Its aim is the
establishment of world socialism."
So what on earth is the ICFI? The answer is just a
click of the computer mouse away.
"The International Committee of the Fourth
International (ICFI) is the leadership of the world socialist
movement, the Fourth International Founded by Leon Trotsky in 1938 .
. . ."
Ain`t the Internet grand!
Did these self-proclaimed "Trotskyites" rip off
Michael Moore`s thesis? The answer is "no." as their articles predate
Moore`s film.
So is this plagiarism, inspiration or
coincidence?
Coincidence is unlikely, since there is a clear
indication that Moore knows these people. Asking the search engine to
find "Michael Moore," it links to an interview with something called
"The IWB"--a site that includes this testimonial by a "reader in
Philadelphia":"Congratulations on your Web site on the Internet. I
think the layout is excellent and very professional. I am very
excited to find genuine Marxist writing, finally. What has been
available under socialism and Trotskyism until now had been truly
pathetic."
Moore`s June 20, 2000, interview with the IWB is
headlined: "The media in this country is one lie repeated over and
over again."
Asked a question suggesting that the American
people were duped by the media into supporting a war against the
Serbs, Moore responded: "I see once again the liberals supporting
this sort of thing. People don`t see what`s really going on here.
I think the media in this country is one lie repeated over and
over again. And everyone just buys into the same lie, and it gets
repeated enough and then it`s the truth."
He`s purportedly talking about the same U.S.
mainstream media that is in love with his film and with virtually
every project he touches. But there is more--this time on the
entertainment media.
Moore was asked about his experience in American
television. At the time, FOX was running his short-lived television
show, "TV Nation?`
"The executives don`t like the show. They put it
on because they believe they can make money.
"That`s one of the great ironies of capitalism.
They will give you the rope to hang themselves with. I mean they`ll
sell it to you. It is an extreme irony that we`re on the Rupert
Murdoch station."
Only a few people in the media have acknowledged
the leaning of Moore`s politics and philosophy. Instead he is almost
always painted as a scruffy, lovable "populist" in jeans and a ball
cap. Populist?
Clothes may make the man, but would Leon Trotsky
look like a lovable "populist" if he dressed in scruffy jeans,
sneakers and a dirty ball-cap?
In a 1989 Los Angeles Times review of
Moore`s first film--Roger and Me--a "documentary" trashing
corporate America with respect to General Motors plant closings in
1986, the reviewer says, it "looks like paint by the numbers
Marxism..." cited Moore as having "an extensive leftwing political
activist background." Remarkably, the reviewer cited Moore`s having
cheated on the chronology of events depicted in that film, too. Among
the reordering of events, Moore used a 1980 speech by Ronald Reagan
as if it occurred after 1986 plant closings in Flint.
The subject of just how far left Michael Moore`s
views are came up in an interview with NBC`s Tim Russert, who asked,
"You consider yourself a liberal?"
Moore answered, ". . . I`m liberal, progressive,
left of--way left of center . . . When you say liberal to me,
I`m going, `You didn`t go far enough,` you know. I`m further than
that,you know."
Russert says, "Far out, pinky, wacko liberal," and
Moore replies,". . . I am way out there liberal."
Moore was taunting Russert, playing with him. It`s
like one of those weird notes made from cutout newspaper
headlines--"stop me before I kill again . . ."
The media and Hollywood have embraced Moore`s film
unquestioningly because they think it is an attack on the gun
culture, something they despise. But it is actually an attack on
American culture, on American society, on us, the American people.
And it is an attack on the media itself.
Like Fox broadcasting, the big corporate media
that embrace Moore, celebrate his cause and promote his so-called
documentary are simply providing the rope with which to hang
themselves. |