Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community

Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community (https://thetfp.com/tfp/)
-   Tilted Politics (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/)
-   -   So Michael Moore is going to be on the O'Reilly Factor tonight (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/63930-so-michael-moore-going-oreilly-factor-tonight.html)

The_wall 07-27-2004 09:17 AM

So Michael Moore is going to be on the O'Reilly Factor tonight
 
This should be interesting hehe. I think Michael Moore will have a good 15 maybe 20 seconds to talk before he's told to "shut up! just shut the hell up! You're unamerican!"

Averett 07-27-2004 09:18 AM

Oh wow, really? That might just be worth watching :D

Superbelt 07-27-2004 09:21 AM

Ba psch, Sean Hannity is on Al Franken's show right now

http://www.airamericaradio.com/

That's cats and dogs in a small cage.
And it's getting kinda ugly.

absorbentishe 07-27-2004 09:57 AM

Definately worth watching tonight then...

Paq 07-27-2004 10:03 AM

DAMNNN
for one night for me not to have cable...

ok, so it's a month w/out tv...oh well

DAMN!!!
i can't believe i'm gonna miss this..

I do bet oreilly calls him unamerican at least once
and that the interview will become..heated.

could someone post a recap when it's done. thanks

MSD 07-27-2004 10:26 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Superbelt
Ba psch, Sean Hannity is on Al Franken's show right now

http://www.airamericaradio.com/

That's cats and dogs in a small cage.
And it's getting kinda ugly.

Crap, can't get the streaming audio to work :(

Charlatan 07-27-2004 10:29 AM

Why is Moore even bothering? It is just going to be O'Reilly yelling at him... better to leave well enough alone.

wonderwench 07-27-2004 10:37 AM

Michael Moore is an
Attention Whore; he can't resist
the primetime telly.

Superbelt 07-27-2004 10:41 AM

Michael and Bill met at the Convention. Bill asked Michael when he would do his show, Michael said after Bill finishes watching F 9/11. Bill said he did and Mike apparently took him at his word and agreed.

They laid down terms on how the format will go. They alternate asking questions of each other. Bill promised to air the entire thing unedited.

Averett 07-27-2004 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by wonderwench
Michael Moore is an
Attention Whore; he can't resist
the primetime telly.

So's O'Reilly. He knows this will get his show monster ratings. And isn't all really about the ratings?

wonderwench 07-27-2004 10:48 AM

O'Reilly already has the highest rated news program on cable and of course he wants to increase his viewership. I doubt he would deny it.

I'd like to see Moore and the Dems admit that Moore is part of their political machine. The claims of his being a documentarian ring hollow when he can be seen sitting in the presidential box at the Dem Convention.

lurkette 07-27-2004 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by wonderwench
Michael Moore is an
Attention Whore; he can't resist
the primetime telly.

Nice haiku! (One syllable too long, but damn cute anyhow!)

What on earth would be the point of watching this debacle? You KNOW what each of them is going to say - they're both more predictable than the fucking sunrise. It'll be like watching an episode of the Beverly Hillbillies (gosh, I never expected Jethro to do something dumb!) or 3's Company, only louder and more obnoxious and with no attractive women to look at. Don't waste a precious hour of your life on this painful rhetorical sideshow - go outside and...I dono...walk your dog, or eat some ice cream or something.

Kadath 07-27-2004 10:54 AM

wonderwench, surely if a newsman can have staunch political views, a documentarian can too?

I am looking forward to watching this. I watch TOF from time to time, and it appears the time has come back around.

Rekna 07-27-2004 10:55 AM

oriely has finally topped jerry springer

Rekna 07-27-2004 11:02 AM

ohh my it gets better.

from oreilly's webpage

Quote:

Hour 2:
Michael Moore and Ann Coulter
Bill faces off with Michael Moore at the DNC, and talks to Ann Coulter about her experience with USA Today concerning the DNC.
Ann Coulter!

Superbelt 07-27-2004 11:03 AM

Rather Moore in a skybox than what the Republicans have: Falwell giving the invocation on the first night of the convention.

wonderwench 07-27-2004 11:35 AM

Off topic but I can't resist.

The U.S. was founded on Judeo Christian values - to ignore the role of religion in defining a moral framework is to deny history.

Laws that are not based upon a moral structure end up as the arbitrary tools of totalitarians.

Bill O'Rights 07-27-2004 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Superbelt
Rather Moore in a skybox than what the Republicans have: Falwell giving the invocation on the first night of the convention.
What does that have to do with Moore being on The O'Reilly Factor?

Quote:

Originally posted by wonderwench
Off topic but I can't resist.

The U.S. was founded on Judeo Christian values - to ignore the role of religion in defining a moral framework is to deny history.

Laws that are not based upon a moral structure end up as the arbitrary tools of totalitarians.

Not this tired old argument/mantra...again. :rolleyes: And, yes it's way off topic. So far off that you'd need a map to find it. It's not relevant whatsoever to the thread, so let's do a "U" turn right now. Before it gets ugly.


cthulu23 07-27-2004 11:38 AM

And no one exemplifies moral behavior better than Falwell, right? Maybe gays and the ACLU really are to blame for 9-11! Anyway, let's get back on topic......

the_marq 07-27-2004 11:40 AM

Man, these guys are both knobs of epic proportions. I hope to see a review of it here tomorrow as I can't get the O'Reily show in Canada.

roachboy 07-27-2004 11:44 AM

crap--i have to teach tonight.

ah well.....o'reilly is an epic tool and watching him is always an irritant--maybe i'll check in here for postgame nonsequitors and that will prompt me perhaps to watch the thing online.

nice to see, in a way, that the nonsequitor generator is turned fully on here--judeo-christian values? with reference to law? otherwise a tool for totalitarians? wtf?

Bill O'Rights 07-27-2004 11:47 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by roachboy
nice to see, in a way, that the nonsequitor generator is turned fully on here--judeo-christian values? with reference to law? otherwise a tool for totalitarians? wtf?
Let it go.

losthellhound 07-27-2004 11:48 AM

yay screaming matches! These "match-ups" are nothing more then stunts, but hey, its promoting both people.. thats what modern media is all about

ARTelevision 07-27-2004 11:52 AM

BTW, Sean Hannity on Al Franken's show was a civil and illuminating dialog - on the part of both men.

kutulu 07-27-2004 12:03 PM

I'm looking forward to seeing Moore talk with O'Reily. Now I'll just have to convince my wife to watch it...

Quote:

Originally posted by Rekna
Ann Coulter!
I laughed my ass off when I read about the USA today incident. The aritcle in question is on world net daily. It's a total piece of trash. What else could you expect from that skinny whore?

seretogis 07-27-2004 12:32 PM

Let's hope that when Moore, Coulter, and O'Reilly are in the same building some sort of political implosion takes place which causes the three of them to disappear.

Bill O'Rights 07-27-2004 12:37 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by kutulu
What else could you expect from that skinny whore?
Not to single out kutulu...but, I'm going to anyway. I want the discussion in here raised to a higher level on the maturity-meter than what I've been seeing. It's not just this thread, it's not just kutulu...it's rampant throughout the politics board, and enough is enough. Of what possible value did the above quoted statement add to the post? None. And it's inflammatory. It takes an otherwise good post, and reduces it to one degree above an outright troll. It ends now, people.

pan6467 07-27-2004 12:41 PM

It does sound like an interesting show.

As for Ann Coulter, I remember Al Franken was on Larry King or someone and they asked him about the people in his book Lying Liars.

Franken ripped a little on O'Reilly but nothing serious. But when Ann's name came up Franken said it was funny, he would talk to GOP people and they told him anything he wanted to say about Ann was the truth... that even GOP insiders found her totally nuts.

SLM3 07-27-2004 12:46 PM

Here's the Coulter article from WorldNetDaily:

Quote:

Here at the Spawn of Satan convention in Boston, conservatives are deploying a series of covert signals to identify one another, much like gay men do. My allies are the ones wearing crosses or American flags. The people sporting shirts emblazoned with the "F-word" are my opponents. Also, as always, the pretty girls and cops are on my side, most of them barely able to conceal their eye-rolling.

Democrats are constantly suing and slandering police as violent, fascist racists – with the exception of Boston's police, who'll be lauded as national heroes right up until the Democrats pack up and leave town on Friday, whereupon they'll revert to their natural state of being fascist, racist pigs.

A speaker at the Democratic National Convention this year, Al Sharpton, accused white police officers of raping and defacing Tawana Brawley in 1987, lunatic charges that eventually led to a defamation lawsuit against Sharpton, and even more eventually to Sharpton paying a jury award to the defamed plaintiff Steve Pagones. So it's a real mystery why cops wouldn't like Democrats.

As for the pretty girls, I can only guess that it's because liberal boys never try to make a move on you without the U.N. Security Council's approval. Plus, it's no fun riding around in those dinky little hybrid cars. My pretty-girl allies stick out like a sore thumb amongst the corn-fed, no make-up, natural fiber, no-bra needing, sandal-wearing, hirsute, somewhat fragrant hippie-chick pie wagons they call "women" at the Democratic National Convention.

Apparently, the nuts at the Democratic National Convention are going to be put in cages outside the convention hall. Sadly, they won't be fighting to the death as is done in W.W.F. caged matches. They're calling this the "protestor's area," although I suppose a better name would be the "truth-free zone."

I thought this was a great idea until I realized the "nut" category did not include Sharpton, Al Gore, Bill Clinton and Teddy Kennedy – all featured speakers at the convention. I'd say the actual policy is only untelegenic nuts get the cages, but little Dennis Kucinich is speaking at the Convention, too. So it must be cages for "nuts who have not run for president as serious candidates for the Democratic Party."

Looking at the line-up of speakers at the Convention, I have developed the 7-11 challenge: I will quit making fun of, for example, Dennis Kucinich, if he can prove he can run a 7-11 properly for 8 hours. We'll even let him have an hour or so of preparation before we open up. Within 8 hours, the money will be gone, the store will be empty, and he'll be explaining how three 11-year olds came in and asked for the money and he gave it to them.

For 20 years, the Democrats wouldn't let Jimmy Carter within 100 miles of a Convention podium. The fact that Carter is now their most respectable speaker tells you where that party is today. Maybe they just want to remind Americans who got us into this Middle East mess in the first place. We've got millions of fanatical Muslims trying to slaughter Americans while shouting "Allah Akbar!" Yeah, let's turn the nation over to these guys.

With any luck, Gore will uncork his speech comparing Republicans to Nazis. Just a few weeks ago, Gore gave a speech accusing the Bush administration of deploying "digital Brown Shirts" to intimidate journalists and pressure the media into writing good things about Bush – in case you were wondering where all those glowing articles about Bush were coming from.

The last former government official to slake his thirst so deeply with the Kool-Aid and become a far-left peacenik was Ramsey Clarke and it took him a few years to really blossom. Clinton must have done some number on Gore. Then again, with his yen for earth tones in a man's wardrobe, maybe Gore's references to "Brown Shirts" was intended as a compliment.

Only one major newspaper – the Boston Herald – reported Gore's "Brown Shirt" comment, though a Bush campaign spokesman's statement quoting the "Brown Shirt" line made it into the very last sentence of a Los Angeles Times article. The New York Times responded with an article criticizing "both" Republicans and Democrats for using Nazi imagery. Democrats call Republicans Nazis, the Republicans quote the Democrats calling Republicans Nazis and "both" are using Nazi imagery. (It's a cycle of violence!)

The nuts in the cages are virtual Bertrand Russells compared to the official speakers at the Democratic Convention. On the basis of their placards, I gather the caged-nut position is that they love the troops so much, they don't want them to get hurt defending America from terrorist attack. "Support the troops," the signs say, "bring them home."

That's my new position on all government workers, except the 5 percent who aren't useless, which is to say cops, prosecutors, firemen and U.S. servicemen. I love bureaucrats at the National Endowment of the Arts funding crucifixes submerged in urine so much – I think they should go home. I love public school teachers punishing any mention of God and banning Christmas songs so much – I think they should go home.

Walking back from the convention site, I chatted with a normal Bostonian for several blocks – who must have identified me through our covert system of signals. He was mostly bemused by the Democrats' primetime speakers and told me he used to be an independent, but for the last 20 years found himself voting mostly Republican. Then he corrected himself and said he votes for the "American."

I'd say I love all these Democrats in Boston so much I want them to go home, but I don't. I want Americans to get a good long look at the French Party and keep the 7-11 challenge in mind.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/ar...TICLE_ID=39644

assilem 07-27-2004 01:13 PM

I'm just excited to see two big fat blubbering sensationalists flap their gums. It will be entertaining if anything.

pan6467 07-27-2004 01:49 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by assilem
I'm just excited to see two big fat blubbering sensationalists flap their gums. It will be entertaining if anything.
Funniest thing I've read all day, and truthful. Thank you for adding humor to my day.:lol:

Seaver 07-27-2004 01:53 PM

Quote:

Here at the Spawn of Satan convention in Boston
I'm conservative... but I stopped reading the article right there...

kutulu 07-27-2004 01:53 PM

It's too bad MM and AC won't be on at the same time. I'd love to see that. However, keeping it just Moore and O'Riely will have better debate.

My main problem with AC is that her editorials consistantly lack any shred of evidence to back up her opinions. I would never expect an editorial columnist to present both sides of the story but I'd like her columns to have more to it than "Democrates hate America and want everyone to go gay, oh and by the way they are racists"

She just needs a reality check. A piece like that might fit in with an ulta-extreme right wing publication (even then it's a maybe) but USA is looking for a columnist that is actually going to attack their issues, not just do a bunch of name calling. Seriously, what were they thinking in the first place?

I don't know if anyone knows this, but I think Moore is going to write editorials for USA Today regarding the RNC.

assilem 07-27-2004 02:17 PM

I just read the transcript on Drudge. Link

It was not as bad as I thought it was going to be. I still want to see it though.

laconic1 07-27-2004 02:24 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Seaver
I'm conservative... but I stopped reading the article right there...
So did I. It just makes us look bad when someone make foolish statements that don't accomplish anything

losthellhound 07-27-2004 02:28 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by crazybill5280
Me too. It just makes us look bad.

That is interesting. Its good to know that estremists like Coulter can rein in Conservatives and make them think twice, much like Michael Moore sometimes does. It means that no matter how extreme either side gets, there are moderates willing to take a second look and re-evaluate how they feel

Superbelt 07-27-2004 02:31 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by ARTelevision
BTW, Sean Hannity on Al Franken's show was a civil and illuminating dialog - on the part of both men.
You're right. The first half was getting tense but then the exchanges mellowed out and it ended quite well.
I was expecting the worst and was surprised.

kutulu 07-27-2004 02:36 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by losthellhound
That is interesting. Its good to know that estremists like Coulter can rein in Conservatives and make them think twice, much like Michael Moore sometimes does. It means that no matter how extreme either side gets, there are moderates willing to take a second look and re-evaluate how they feel
Of course Moore is extreme, but he's not extreme like Coulter. I put Moore more on the level of Rush. Both like to inject their own brand of humor and both do make an attempt to provide a factual background to go with their commentary.

Bill O'Rights 07-27-2004 02:56 PM

MUCH better, guys. :thumbsup:

roachboy 07-27-2004 04:50 PM

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,127140,00.html

am i just confused, or does o'reilly's column say that the moor thing is being shown tomorrow night (wednesday)?

roachboy 07-27-2004 05:03 PM

http://www.bopnews.com/archives/001120.html

this, however, is pretty funny......

Averett 07-27-2004 06:11 PM

*yawn*

I saw it... Pretty boring really. I expected more fireworks. They were both pretty civil though.

pan6467 07-27-2004 08:34 PM

Saw part of Moore's interview on Nightline with Ted Koppel, far, far more interesting.

Had to laugh though because MM tried very hard to get Koppel to agree with him at times and Koppel would just look at him and either smile or change the subject.

It was interesting when Koppel talked about Kerry speaking French and how that wouldn't change Chiraq's opinion of the US and Moore laughed and said it would.

Liked how Koppel and Moore talked about how the French and Germans wouldn't enter the war.

One of the few things I agree with Moore on, is we are in a very bad mess. We went in with no plan, no help is coming, the Iraqis as much as W. wants us to believe want us there don't, you can't form a true free society with another country's rifle in your face.

Liked his analogy of how the 13 colonies would have reacted if the French had invaded us before the revolution and said, "we are here to free you." It is true revolution and democracy have to come from the people within and not from an invading country, it just becomes a puppet government in the eyes of the people invaded.

Moore isn't bad he just takes things to the extreme and gets carried away with himself.

ARTelevision 07-28-2004 07:16 AM

This was the quintessential immovable object vs. irresistible force stalemate. Nothing was achieved or accomplished except the increased legitimization of Michael Moore.

absorbentishe 07-28-2004 07:59 AM

Ah, not much there, but I didn't see the whole thing. MM was stuck on his "would you send you kid to iraq" defense.

kutulu 07-28-2004 08:16 AM

I missed it. I had a reminder timer set for when the show was scheduled to come on and when that time came, the show was ending. That sucks.

DelayedReaction 07-28-2004 08:45 AM

I watched it, and couldn't help but feel that MM lost out on it. It was pretty obvious near the end that all he could ask was "Would you sacrifice your children?" Although there wasn't much to begin with, Moore lost some respect yesterday.

assilem 07-28-2004 10:34 AM

I saw it. Reading the transcript was more exciting. I agree with Art on this one.

hammer4all 07-28-2004 02:43 PM

Regardless of whether Bill O'Reilly would answer the question or not, I think Moore's point was well made: O'Reilly wouldn't sacrifice his child to secure Fallujah.

Michael Moore was also in the Boston area to give a speech at the Take Back America meeting in Cambridge, across the river from the Democratic National Convention.

Here is his speech in which rails against the corporate media:
Quote:

And I know a lot of people have seen my film and the obvious--[cheers]--the bad guy in the movie is George W. Bush. But there's the unstated villain in the film. And that's our national media.
Uninvited Guest: Michael Moore Takes Boston By Storm

DelayedReaction 07-28-2004 03:24 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by hammer4all
Regardless of whether Bill O'Reilly would answer the question or not, I think Moore's point was well made: O'Reilly wouldn't sacrifice his child to secure Fallujah.
Funny how it isn't O'Reilly's decision whether or not his child goes or not? O'Reilly made it very clear that he was willing to sacrifice himself to secure Fallujah; whether or not his son would choose the same is irrelevant.

I'm really getting tired of Moore's rhetoric here. The people sent off to war aren't children; they're adults who made their own decision to enlist. Noone makes the decision for them, and Moore has yet to acknowledge that.

cthulu23 07-28-2004 03:32 PM

I think that most people would consider 18 - 20 year olds as still a "kid," if not an actual child. It is the young men of a society that always bear the brunt of military action. To paraphrase Kurt Vonnegut, all wars are a children's crusade.

DelayedReaction 07-28-2004 11:26 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by cthulu23
I think that most people would consider 18 - 20 year olds as still a "kid," if not an actual child. It is the young men of a society that always bear the brunt of military action. To paraphrase Kurt Vonnegut, all wars are a children's crusade.
I guess part of it is that I'm 21, but when I hear "would you sacrifice your children" I get images of sending toddlers off to be shot. No matter how people view them, in the eyes of the law 18 year-olds are legal adults. They are considered to be of an age that can make decisions. Since no parent can legally force their child into military service, I have a lot of trouble with Moore's rhetoric.

meepa 07-28-2004 11:55 PM

I thought MM's strategy of "would you send your child to death" was really unconvincing in the context of how they were arguing. It seems to me that that argument only really works if O'Reilly was supporting a draft, which I don't think he is off the top of my head. Anybody who signed up for the military is or should be aware of the risks they agreed to in the first place. I'm no fan of Pres. Bush or the war, or even O'Reilly that much, but it seemed to me that MM got spanked last night.

SecretMethod70 07-29-2004 12:54 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by cthulu23
I think that most people would consider 18 - 20 year olds as still a "kid," if not an actual child. It is the young men of a society that always bear the brunt of military action. To paraphrase Kurt Vonnegut, all wars are a children's crusade.
Gotta make a decision then. If they're children and aren't responsible for their own decisions - such as joining the military - then they shouldn't be able to vote and effect policy either. Can't have it both ways. Either they're capable of making responsible decisions - voting and joinging the military for example - or they're not. It can't be one or the other, whichever is more convenient.

<---21 year old

hammer4all 07-29-2004 01:11 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by meepa
I thought MM's strategy of "would you send your child to death" was really unconvincing in the context of how they were arguing. It seems to me that that argument only really works if O'Reilly was supporting a draft, which I don't think he is off the top of my head. Anybody who signed up for the military is or should be aware of the risks they agreed to in the first place. I'm no fan of Pres. Bush or the war, or even O'Reilly that much, but it seemed to me that MM got spanked last night.
I disagree. O'Reilly is a proponent of the war and MM is against it. I think we have an obligation to those in the military to only send them to war as a last resort. I would guess most of those who enlist would also share that fundamental expectation. Therefore, if war is truly a last resort, those who campaign for a war that would put other people kids in harms way should be willing to risk their own.

Kadath 07-29-2004 05:13 AM

For O'Reilly to say he would go is disingenuous on the face of it -- why has he not signed up? The military wouldn't take him, as he is too old to enlist for the first time -- they might take veterans his age (maybe) but not a buck private. So his statement is empty.
meepa, I agree somewhat with what you said, except that it presumes that all people joining the army and fighting in the war are doing it because they want to -- some are doing it because they have no better option.

cthulu23 07-29-2004 05:36 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by SecretMethod70
Gotta make a decision then. If they're children and aren't responsible for their own decisions - such as joining the military - then they shouldn't be able to vote and effect policy either. Can't have it both ways. Either they're capable of making responsible decisions - voting and joinging the military for example - or they're not. It can't be one or the other, whichever is more convenient.

<---21 year old

You guys are taking the "children's crusade" statement too literally. I specifically said that 18-20 year olds aren't children. That doesn't change the fact that they bear the burden of military action in almost any society. And, yes, they are still thought of as "kids" by most older folks even though they have legal control over their lives.

Arguing about the legal status of an 18 year old misses the point of what Moore was trying to say. Would a parent want to send their child (and it will always be their child regardless of the child's age) to Iraq? If O'Reilly is so convinced of the justness of this conflict, would he be willing to "let" his son go to war? It's real easy to armchair quarterback a stupid war when one is sacrificing nothing.

roachboy 07-29-2004 05:57 AM

read the transcript and thought it sort of funny--it seemed like both of them were sticking to their scripts--o'reilly in his usual mode, moore rehearsing a scene from his film.

it was nothing like this:

http://www.angelfire.com/pa/sergeman...ign/glick.html

Bookman 07-29-2004 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by DelayedReaction
Funny how it isn't O'Reilly's decision whether or not his child goes or not? O'Reilly made it very clear that he was willing to sacrifice himself to secure Fallujah; whether or not his son would choose the same is irrelevant.

I'm really getting tired of Moore's rhetoric here. The people sent off to war aren't children; they're adults who made their own decision to enlist. Noone makes the decision for them, and Moore has yet to acknowledge that.

You have to consider that people like O'Reilly and the rest of the better offs send their children to Ivy League schools while most of the soldiers signed up out of desperation (having nothing lucrative to do).

phyzix525 07-29-2004 07:34 AM

As a parent there is no war that I would want to sacrifice my child. I myself may, but not my children, thats just the feeling of every parent I believe. no partent wants there kid to die no matter what the circumstances.

DelayedReaction 07-29-2004 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Bookman
You have to consider that people like O'Reilly and the rest of the better offs send their children to Ivy League schools while most of the soldiers signed up out of desperation (having nothing lucrative to do).
They still made the choice. It doesn't matter what income bracket they're in; they're legal adults who made a decision to fight for their country. Asking people if they would "sacrifice their children" is demeaning and disrespectful to those in uniform. It makes soldiers seem as if they were unwitting pawns in some kind of insidious low-income draft, when in reality every one of those soldiers made the decision to join on their own.

Quote:

Originally posted by cthulu23
Arguing about the legal status of an 18 year old misses the point of what Moore was trying to say. Would a parent want to send their child (and it will always be their child regardless of the child's age) to Iraq? If O'Reilly is so convinced of the justness of this conflict, would he be willing to "let" his son go to war?
No parent would want to send their child into harms way, but O'Reilly wouldn't have much of a choice if his son decided to enlist. What Moore is trying to do is use images of dead soldiers to emphasize just how pointless he feel this war is, and to use the fear of casualties to get Bush out of office.

It all boils down to whether you feel this is a "just war" or not. Moore obviously feels the war is not justified, and will therefore consider any casualty to be a needless waste of human life. In contrast people like O'Reilly, who believe the war is justified, will look at casualties as heroic sacrifices.

I personally feel that the war is justified, and that we are doing good in Iraq. I think Bush was acting on intelligence that, at the time, he considered valid and important to act on. Few people can argue that removing Saddam was a bad thing to do, and that the people of Iraq are now better off under a less oppressive system of government. But these are my opinions and my perspective is skewed because of them. Your opinions may be different, and while I disagree with them I still respect them.

cthulu23 07-29-2004 08:21 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by DelayedReaction
But these are my opinions and my perspective is skewed because of them. Your opinions may be different, and while I disagree with them I still respect them.
No, you're wrong! You don't respect me because....wait, all this message board civility has got me confused. Can't we just take turns negating each other's statements like on other sites? :)

Kidding aside, it's nice to have an Iraq war/ Michael Moore themed discussion that doesn't devolve into a vitriol fest. I guess we are learning how to get along here.

roachboy 07-29-2004 08:21 AM

while i disagree with delayed reaction about the war, i agree with what he is saying about the question moore posed to o'reilly.

but it was--that series of questions--straight out of moore's film.

however, i think moore (and other people who think about this kind of thing) do have a strong argument about the class dimension of the volunteer military--that it is disproportionately working class kids from formerly viable manufacturing areas who join and that they are sold the military by recruiters as an economic option.

the same arguments persuaded relatives of mine to join--they went in hoping that they would not end up cannon fodder.
they understood going in that they were throwing the dice in a bid to get training (in helicopters as it turned out) that would put them in a position to get a post-military gig in the field they wanted to enter. the decision was made as much after looking at the backgrounds of people who worked in the areas that they wanted to go into as it was for any grand patriotic motive.

after basic, they were much more about the grand narrative. but then they were also reading stuff like soldier of fortune during their short home leave.

later, once the personality reconstruction of basic faded, the other motives came back to the fore again.

while the above is obviously particular, i dont think it unusual. and i do not think that it makes any sense to try to cram everyone who joins the military into the same motivational box. no doubt there are some who join out of a sense of patriotic duty. but that is far from an exclusive motive--if it was, the recruiting system would not be so devoted to making other kinds of arguments, no?
and if the military itself recognizes the complexity of motive that mght prompt a kid to join, why should we not in this thread?


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:14 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project


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 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360