Will Fahrenheit 9/11 Bring Down Bush And Howard?
Will Fahrenheit 9/11 bring down Bush and Howard?
Rohan Pearce
Green Left Weekly
“I have long thought Michael Moore a liar, and should not have been shocked when I saw his `documentary' Fahrenheit 9/11. Even so, I was horrified. This film — breaking box-office records in America — is so deceitful that it makes the infamous Triumph of the Will documentary by Hitler's propagandist, Leni Riefenstahl, seem balanced. But what shocked me even more than Moore's hymn of hatred of America and its president was the reaction to it of the small audience at the preview I saw at the Crown multiplex. Many there clapped when the dis-credits finally rolled.” — So moaned right-wing commentator Andrew Bolt in his July 21 column in Melbourne's Herald Sun.
I was amused and a little offended by Bolt's rant, but hardly surprised by his predictable Rottweiler-like assault on Moore's documentary. Bolt is part of a desperate — and unsuccessful — campaign to derail the relentless forward march of the film.
It's easy enough to dismiss a far-right loon like Bolt, especially when he comes up with gems like this, from his September 4 column: “There's something a little fishy about Finding Nemo and I don't mean the clownfish hero with the gammy fin. I'm talking instead about the too-easy, no-pain, nature-worshipping New Age-ism being pushed by this hit animation.”
But while Bolt may have been in the loopy, fringe minority when it came to Finding Nemo, he enjoys much broader company in the corporate media with his attack on Fahrenheit 9/11. For example, the “liberal” Melbourne Age ran an op-ed by Matthew D'Ancona on July 9 that referred to “the dodgy detail of [Moore's] work” and claimed that the US press had already conducted a “forensic demolition” of Fahrenheit 9/11.
Leaving aside whether the US (or Australian) corporate media have the credibility to dissect Moore's film after their uniformly unquestioning coverage of US President George Bush's invasion and occupation of Iraq — particularly the refusal to seriously investigate Washington's (and Canberra's) pre-war lies about Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction — errors of fact in Fahrenheit 9/11 have yet to be discovered.
Bolt's crude hatchet-job appears to rely almost entirely on an essay by David Kopel, “Fifty-nine Deceits in Fahrenheit 911”, published by the Colorado-based Independence Institute (Bolt directs his readers to Kopel's flag-waving website). Kopel is a “policy analyst” at the US far-right Cato Institute.
Kopel's list of Moore's
“deceits” include “affiliates of the Iranian and
Syrian-backed terrorist group Hezbollah are promoting
Fahrenheit 9/11”, “The only Iraqi casualties which
Moore shows are civilians, although military casualties far
outnumbered civilian” and, “In Fahrenheit, Moore
pretends to support our troops. But in fact, he supports the
enemy in Iraq — the coalition of Saddam loyalists, al Qaeda
operatives and terrorists controlled by Iran or Syria — who
are united in their desire to murder Iraqis and to destroy
any possibility of democracy in Iraq.” (An entertaining
summary of Kopel's claims is available at
Unfortunately for Bolt,
Kopel and their ilk, Moore has produced an extensive list of
sources for all the claims made in Fahrenheit 9/11
and posted rebuttals of claims that his film is inaccurate
on his website (http://www.michaelmoore.com).
As Moore pointed out in an interview with the July 12 Time
magazine: “There's lots of disagreement with my analysis of
these facts or my opinion based on the facts. But there is
not a single factual error in the movie. I'm thinking of
offering a $10,000 reward for anyone that can find a single
fact that's wrong.” Of course, many right-wingers accept
leftist-turned-hawk Christopher Hitchens' approach. “I think
we can agree”, Hitchens wrote in a June 21 article for the
online journal Slate, “that the film is so flat-out
phoney that `fact-checking' is beside the point”. The
corporate media is attempting to discredit Fahrenheit
9/11 because, despite Moore's endorsement of Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry, the film goes far beyond
the carefully managed bounds of “debate” between the
Republican White House and the pro-war Democratic challenger
in the lead-up to the November election. Whatever the
limitations of Moore's political views, Fahrenheit
9/11 spectacularly exposes and undermines the US ruling
class's phoney “war on terror”. It graphically and
emotionally reveals whose interests are really being served
in the bloodbath in Iraq. What is sending the Andrew
Bolts and David Kopels of this world into a panic is that
the overwhelmingly positive reception Fahrenheit 9/11
continues to enjoy — and the anecdotal evidence of vast
numbers of cinema-goers having their eyes opened to how big
corporate interests determine US policy — may even influence
the results of the US presidential election. With any luck,
Australian Prime Minister John Howard will also be caught in
the backlash. On July 21, the Behavior Research Center
(BRC), based in Phoenix, Arizona, released poll results that
one in four registered Arizona voters intend to see the film
before the presidential election. As might be expected, the
film appealed most to Democrat voters, but nearly as many
registered as “independents”, who account for 25% of
Arizona's voters in the state. And 25% of Republicans plan
to see the film and six per cent have already done so. The
research found that while four in 10 white voters have seen
or plan to see the film, the figure rises to 55%-60% among
Hispanics and African Americans. Announcing the survey's
results, the BRC stated: “Most interesting, however, are the
voting plans of people depending whether they have seen or
plan to see the film. For instance, among voters who have
already viewed the film, the vote favours [Democratic
presidential candidate] Kerry by three-to-one. Among those
planning to see Fahrenheit 9/11, the vote is 56% for
Kerry, 30% for Bush and 15% undecided... Among voters who
were uncommitted to either Bush or Kerry, an impressive 68%
plan to see Fahrenheit 9/11.” “The fact that
they're undecided means they're still looking for
information”, explained BRC's Earl de Berge. De Berge told
the Capitol Media Services on July 21: “If you're looking at
an election where you may be talking about 1% or 2%
difference between the winning and losing candidate, all of
a sudden a small shift may actually be fairly relevant.”
This trend is not restricted to Arizona. On July 20, the
Gallup News Service also reported that more than half of all
American adults (56%) either have seen or expect to see
Fahrenheit 9/11. The Gallup poll was conducted on
July 8-11. Among all Americans, more people have an
unfavourable than favourable impression of the movie,
however those who have seen it are overwhelmingly
favourable. It is easy to understand why Fahrenheit
9/11 has found such a receptive audience. A May
Washington Post-ABC News poll found that 57% of Americans
described themselves as “angry” about the situation in Iraq.
Only a minority described themselves as being “proud” of the
US invasion and occupation. A July 8-11 Washington Post poll
found that 19% of Americans saw the war in Iraq as the most
important issue in the presidential election. Another 19%
saw the “the US campaign against terrorism” as the most
important issue, only beaten by “the economy and jobs”
(29%). Moore has made it clear that he wants to see
“regime change” in the other countries of the “coalition of
the willing”, including Australia. If Bolt's experience of
the audience applauding Fahrenheit 9/11 is any guide
to the reception the film is having in Australia — and this
being confirmed by reports from the first screenings of the
film throughout Australia then it may well help unseat Prime
Minister Howard and British Labour PM Tony Blair. Pip
Hinman, a campaigner for the Sydney-based Stop the War
Coalition, hopes that Moore's film will reveal to millions
of Australians the reality behind the occupation of Iraq in
the lead-up to the federal election. “Although Labor leader
Mark Latham has promised to bring Australian troops home
`before Xmas' if he wins the election, neither he nor Howard
are in fact opposed to the occupation of Iraq. Hopefully,
Moore's film will convince even more people that all foreign
troops have to get out of Iraq if there's going to be peace
there. “Many in the anti-war movement, myself included,
are hoping that the film will encourage people to ditch
Howard. But we're also hoping that it'll give a big boost to
anti-war organising. Part of the reason people are so
supportive of Moore's message is that most people are very
disillusioned with the occupation of Iraq.” Moore himself
certainly seems to hope that the film will do more than
encourage people to vote. On June 24, USA Today
reported that “Fahrenheit 9/11 is about much more
than beating Bush, Moore says. `The issues in this film are
going to be with us next year', he says. `We're still going
to have war in Iraq. We're still going to have al Qaeda, no
matter who is in the White House. If I can contribute to
re-energizing those who have given up, then I'd feel that we
will have done a good thing.”
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