ManaByte
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5251769/site/newsweek/
A short bit from Newsweek this week that looks at the main points Michael Moore makes in his movie. Nice to see Moore hasn't changed much from Bowling for Columbine:
Newsweek's review can also be read here:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5251768/site/newsweek/
A short bit from Newsweek this week that looks at the main points Michael Moore makes in his movie. Nice to see Moore hasn't changed much from Bowling for Columbine:
Saudi flights out of the United States. The movie claims that in the days after 9/11, when airspace was shut down, the White House approved special charter flights so that prominent Saudisincluding members of the bin Laden familycould leave the country. Author Craig Unger appears, claiming that bin Laden family members were never interviewed by the FBI. Not true, according to a recent report from the 9/11 panel. The report confirms that six chartered airplanes flew 142 mostly Saudi nationals out of the country, including one carrying members of the bin Laden family. But the flights didn't begin until Sept. 14after airspace reopened. Moreover, the report states the Saudi flights were screened by the FBI, and 22 of the 26 people on the bin Laden flight were interviewed. None had any links to terrorism.
Newsweek's review can also be read here:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5251768/site/newsweek/
June 28 issue - Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11" isn't even out till late this week, and you probably already know what you think about it. Some of the advance reaction has been what you'd expect: Madonna recommending it to her audiences, a conservative group trying to pressure theaters not to show it. True, Fox TV posted a rave review on its Web site"a tribute to patriotism"while Tina Brown's column quoted a Kerry supporter in Hollywood comparing Moore to Goebbels. (That Goebbels? And they say Moore is over the top.) But mostly it has been the usual suspects taking the usual sides. For the right, "Fahrenheit 9/11" is a scurrilous attack on the commander in chief in a time of war. For the left, on the other hand, "Fahrenheit 9/11" is a scurrilous attack on the commander in chief in a time of warand it was about time, though no prudent mainstream Democrat would want to come out and say so. For everybody else ... well, is there anybody else?