Shockingly enough, Michael Moore has managed to stir up controversy in order to promote his new film "Sicko," but as usual he's playing dumb (PDF):
Well, going quietly to Cannes, I guess, was not to be. For some strange reason, on May 2nd the Bush administration initiated an action against me over how I obtained some of the content they believe is in my film. As none of them have actually seen the film (or so I hope!), they decided, unlike with "Fahrenheit 9/11," not to wait until the film was out of the gate and too far down the road to begin their attack.
Bush's Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, launched an investigation of a trip I took to Cuba to film scenes for the movie. These scenes involve a group of 9/11 rescue workers who are suffering from illnesses obtained from working down at Ground Zero. They have received little or no help with their health care from the government. I do not want to give away what actually happens in the movie because I don't want to spoil it for you (although I'm sure you'll hear much about it after it unspools Saturday). Plus, our lawyers have advised me to say little at this point, as the film goes somewhere far scarier than "Cuba." Rest assured of one thing: no laws were broken. All I've done is violate the modern-day rule of journalism that says, "ask no questions of those in power or your luncheon privileges will be revoked."
This preemptive action taken by the Bush administration on the eve of the "Sicko" premiere in Cannes led our attorneys to fear for the safety of our film, noting that Secretary Paulson may try to claim that the content of the movie was obtained through a violation of the trade embargo that our country has against Cuba and the travel laws that prohibit average citizens of our free country from traveling to Cuba. (The law does not prohibit anyone from exercising their first amendment right of a free press and documentaries are protected works of journalism.)
I was floored when our lawyers told me this. "Are you saying they might actually confiscate our movie?" "Yes," was the answer. "These days, anything is possible. Even if there is just a 20 percent chance the government would seize our movie before Cannes, does anyone want to take that risk?"
Certainly not. So there we were last week, spiriting a duplicate master negative out of the country just so no one from the government would take it from us...
I mean, folks, I have just about had it. Investigating ME because I'm trying to help some 9/11 rescue workers our government has abandoned? Once again, up is down and black is white. There are only two people in need of an investigation and a trial, and the desire for this across America is so widespread you don't even need to see the one's smirk or hear the other's sneer to know who I am talking about.
But no, I'm the one who now has to hire lawyers and sneak my documentary out of the country just so people can see a friggin' movie. I mean, it's just a movie! What on earth could I have placed on celluloid that would require such a nonsensical action against me?
Ok. Scratch that.
Early reviews are positive, with the FoxNews.com critic writing that the film "shows a new maturity" and "never talks down or baits the audience." But I'll believe it when I see it. The lesson of our Spinsanity articles on Moore is simple: don't trust anything he says unless it's independently verified.
"The lesson of our Spinsanity articles on Moore is simple: don't trust anything he says unless it's independently verified."
I'd hope most readers would apply this standard to anybody, not just Moore.
Posted by: Doug | May 21, 2007 at 06:39 PM
I looked for your list of articles on Fox 'News'. Shock horror, there aren't any.
I find the Fox 'News' praise slightly worrying, to tell you the truth. Moore's standards must be slipping.
Posted by: Backard pell | May 21, 2007 at 08:30 PM
Dear Backard Pell,
Spinsanity has articles on Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity and other people associated with Fox News like Ann Coulter. Surely that counts?
Posted by: Marie | May 23, 2007 at 05:06 PM