Saturday, July 10, 2004

The Globe and Mail: Pitching high and tight to Michael Moore

The Globe and Mail: "But spending time around Moore can be infectious. All that talk about my lazy American colleagues shirking their responsibility to put the tough questions to Bush made me feel guilty by association. I wanted to prove I couldn't be pushed around like them. So I put a question to Moore, referencing David Denby's New Yorker review of Fahrenheit 9/11, asking something that had bothered me when I saw it.
I appreciated the j'accuse nature of the film, but I wanted to know why it didn't address the dangers of armed Islamic fundamentalism, obsessive anti-Westernism, suicide terrorists, and what Moore thinks would be the proper approach for the U.S. government to legitimately conduct itself in a fight against terrorism. After all, if you're going to criticize measures like the Patriot Act, wouldn't you want to offer an alternative?
Moore took a moment to compose his answer. 'Night after night, we are hammered on our television networks and our cable news channels about the Islamic fundamentalists. We've seen it all, we've heard it all,' he began, speaking unusually slowly and deliberately. 'My job is to say: Maybe there's something else going on, maybe there's another piece of information you should have before making up your mind. Maybe you should see an opposing viewpoint once in a while in this country. The corporate media in this country, they've got control of it 24/7, 365 days of the year. My film is our humble plea: Can we have just two hours for our side?
'The second part of your question is: How do you fight a war against religious fundamentalists? Well, that's what we're doing in this country, and I hope we're successful on November 2.'
It was a funny quip, and many of the journalists laughed and applauded Moore's response. But the joke disappointed me, because he was using it to avoid answering the question. I wanted to push him on the issue, and on his avoidance of the issue. But a press assistant had taken away my microphone and handed it to another journalist, who threw Moore another softball."


By SIMON HOUPT
The Globe and Mail

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