New here?  Read this first!
MOOREWATCH
"...The biggest anti-Michael Moore website on the internet..." - Michael Moore

Tuesday, June 29, 2004

Just Wars and Poor Folks

Posted by Lee on 06/29/04 at 02:11 AM

The following was originally published at The New Republic.

Moore Distortions
by Richard Just
June 28, 2004

A mainstream liberal consensus on Michael Moore’s “Fahrenheit 9/11” has emerged quickly. It goes something like this: Moore’s a nutty conspiracy theorist, and parts of the movie—in which he suggests, among other things, that we invaded Afghanistan not because of 9/11 but because we wanted to build a natural gas pipeline—showcase Moore at his least responsible.

But he’s also a talented polemicist and filmmaker; and as a result, the second half of the movie—in which he uses the story of Lila Lipscomb, a grieving military mother, to examine why it is only the poor and working class who sacrifice in times of war—is both profound and smart. In “The New York Times”, A.O. Scott called the interviews with Lipscomb the “most moving sections” of the film. If the folks with whom I saw the movie provide any indication, audiences across the country will leave the theater so moved by Lipscomb’s story that they will forgive “Fahrenheit 9/11” its often-incoherent points and poorly supported accusations. That, I suspect, is exactly what Moore wanted: to wrap assertions that can only be described as odd—such as his insistence that the military is failing to adequately patrol miles of deserted Oregonian coast—in the heart-breaking story of a mother’s loss and the legitimate observation that America’s system of military service asks too much of the poor and too little of elites.

There’s a central—and dishonest—trick to what Moore is doing here: He’s conflating two questions that have very little to do with each other. The question of whether a war is just (Moore’s thesis is that the Iraq and Afghanistan wars were not) has no logical connection to the question of whether it is fought by a justly selected military. Vietnam was not an unjust war because elites received draft deferments; it was an unjust war in which the burdens of military service happened to be spread unfairly. Every war the United States has fought since Vietnam has been fought by an unjustly distributed military. But not every war has been unjust. The distribution of sacrifice in a democracy is a moral problem all its own.


Posted in F911 Lies
(0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalinkE-mail this to a friendDiscuss in the forums

Page 1 of 1 pages

Member Info

Hello. You will need to Login or Register to post comments.
Subscribe for updates via e-mail


Sponsors



Tip Jar

If you feel we provide a useful site, even if you just come here to disagree, please consider donating a few dollars to help keep the server going. Thank you.

Use PayPal:
Use Amazon.Com:
Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay Learn More

Recent Comments

Last 30 comments

Last 60 comments

Top 5 commenters

Buzz - (1000)
w0rf - (596)
Rann Aridorn - (583)
up4debate - (493)
JimK - (454)

Most popular posts

Jim Kenefick and Moorewatch as presented by Michael Moore in Sicko (415)
It's Officially Propaganda When the Enemy Uses It!! (365)
Michael Moore, war profiteer (255)
Armed and Hoserous (248)
How the "new left" does things (232)

Search

Local Search:
Advanced Search
Google Search:

Archives

August 2008
S M T W T F S
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31            


Complete Archives

By category


Statistics


This page has been viewed 12238392 times
Page rendered in 0.4520 seconds
50 querie(s) executed
Total Entries: 1867
Total Comments: 14938
Total Trackbacks: 160
Most Recent Entry: 08/19/2008 01:59 pm
Most Recent Comment on: 08/14/2008 02:09 pm
Total Members: 3517
Total Logged in members: 0
Total guests: 84
Total anonymous users: 0
Most Recent Visitor on: 08/20/2008 05:52 am
The most visitors ever was 2215 on 07/01/2004 06:32 pm