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FORD
12-17-2005, 09:40 PM
December 17th, 2005 2:15 pm
THE MAVERICKS OF '05

By Michael Moore / Rolling Stone

They were the seven words you can't say on television:

"George Bush doesn't care about black people."

2005 will be remembered for many things, from a rising body count in an endless war to the first criminal charges against a sitting White House official in 130 years to something as simple as the weather and a storm that revealed, with one levee break, an administration re-elected on the promise of keeping everyone safe had no clue at all what to do.

But it was the bigger levee of apathy and silence which was broken by the utterance of those seven words, live and unexpected, on national TV. Spoken with simple sincerity by Kanye West on the NBC telethon to aid the victims of Hurricane Katrina, it shot out of the nation's flat screens like a laser beam of truth.

Stunned viewers simply could not believe that someone had said what many had been thinking -- but no one was saying. An obviously nervous director cut away from West as soon as he could, and by the time the telethon aired three hours later on the West Coast, NBC had exorcised those seven dirty words.

In a time of carefully managed information dissemination and a media afraid to veer from the Official Story, it was, perhaps, the pivotal moment of the year, the instant where culture and politics collided and the apple cart of a president who once had a 90% approval rating was turned upside down. NBC's censoring of Kanye West's remarks, I'm sure, made sense to the brass at General Electric. After all, we now live in a time where dissent must be marginalized, ignored, punished and, most importantly, seen as something that gives aid and comfort to America's enemies.

What NBC didn't understand was that the American public was already way ahead of them. Thanks to a number of individuals who, in 2005, dared to step out of line and say something real, the public had begun a seismic shift away from the chokehold of uniform and uninformed thought. It was the year the Stones got political and showed no sympathy for the devil. You could turn on Jay Leno and see Bright Eyes singing "When the President Talks to God." George Clooney seemed like he was churning out a film a month that spoke to the dark path the country had taken – and people were lining up to buy tickets. It was a year when the most popular music video (Green Day's "Wake Me When September Ends") was one that dared to show an authentic depiction of how the Iraq war costs young soldiers their limbs and their lives.

But not all of 2005's truth-tellers and troublemakers were well-known artists – some were just average citizens who had simply seen enough. A student in Ohio decided he'd take on the army recruiters swarming his campus in search of fresh bodies. A guy in Texas made it his mission to uncover the dirty deals of the Republican House majority leader. A lone mother of a deceased soldier went to Crawford one day, and the American people listened and wondered what they would do if their son had died for a pack of lies. It never got better for Mr. Bush from that day forward.

As a rule, we are instructed from childhood that serious consequences shall arise if we dare to rock the boat. We learn instinctually that it is always better to go along so that we get along. To slip off the assembly line of groupthink means to risk ridicule, rejection, banishment. Being alone sucks, but being alone while you are attacked, smeared, and scorned is about the same as picking up a hot poker and jamming it in your eye. Who in their right mind would want to do that? Especially when conformity to the community offers as its reward acceptance, support, love and the chance to be comfortably numb.

This month we celebrated the 50th anniversary of a moment that shook the world on December 1, 1955. A black seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama, refused to give up her seat to a white man when she was ordered by the law to do just that. This unknown woman endured every imaginable abuse from the authorities, the press, and even from some of the old guard in her own black community. None of that mattered. A single, simple act by a lone woman ignited a revolution. When Rosa Parks died in October of this year, the president-who-doesn't-care-about-black-people couldn't even bring himself to make it to her funeral. December 1st should be a national holiday, to honor all individuals who rebel and cause trouble for the common good. Without these people there would never had been a United States of America and without them it won't continue.

Far from becoming Public Enemy #1, Kanye West was not only roundly applauded across the country, he was asked to come back and appear live on the following week's telethon, one that aired on all the major networks. The country had come a long way from a certain Oscar night two years prior when a guy I know was booed off the stage for his anti-Bush remarks.

I asked Kanye what prompted him to speak out and he told me he hadn't planned on doing so. "I was just standing there, looking at the teleprompter with the words they had written for me to say and I just thought, ‘How can I read these words when the truth needs to be said?'"

And that's the good news about 2005. This year's mavericks and rabble rousers stuck their necks out -- and they didn't get them chopped off. They helped the nation make a turn toward the truth, and average Americans began to speak their minds freely in the diners and the churches and the bars, little words of discontent and dissent and growing outrage. You can argue that it was five years and 2,100 dead soldiers too late. Or you can say that Americans may be slow learners, but when we finally figure something out… well, watch out. A new majority forms and there can be no stopping it. Stands taken by this year's troublemakers had become, by years' end, the mainstream position of the American people. Every poll shows the same thing: The majority now oppose the war, the majority no longer trust the president when he speaks, and the majority would rather vote for a Democrat next year. The time is ripe to get this country back in the hands of the majority. Will we seize the moment? Or will we need a whole new crop of rebels next year to keep us honest and doing the right thing? Thank God we will still have artists and writers and everyday citizens willing to sign up for the call. Those who dare to be different are the closest thing we have to a national treasure.

DrMaddVibe
12-17-2005, 10:32 PM
Moo-re is stuck on stupid!

Unchainme
12-17-2005, 11:53 PM
Never been a huge Moore Fan, Love Canadian Bacon though, Grate movie, ironically seems pretty true to some of FORD's BCE conspiracy theories, Also was a hilliarious as hell.

ELVIS
12-18-2005, 02:13 AM
Originally posted by Unchainme
Love Canadian Bacon though, Grate movie, ironically seems pretty true to some of FORD's BCE conspiracy theories,


Because it's all fiction...

FORD
12-18-2005, 02:22 AM
Nothing fictional about what Moore wrote here. Furthermore, Moore's movie's are documentaries. By definition, that means non-fiction.

Except Canadian Bacon, of course.

Anyway, let's not make this about Michael Moore's movies. I'd like to see someone refute anything he had to say in his column.

Because I don't think you can. Pretty damn accurate summary of the year actually, albeit a brief one.

DrMaddVibe
12-18-2005, 10:00 AM
Originally posted by FORD
Pretty damn accurate summary of the year actually, albeit a brief one.


You have a selective memory and a small mind.

kentuckyklira
12-18-2005, 11:33 AM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
You have a selective memory and a small mind. Seems larger than yours, since Ford´s challenge seems too hard for you!

DrMaddVibe
12-18-2005, 01:13 PM
That's what you think 2005 was ALL about?

You're a small tool too!

scamper
12-19-2005, 07:17 AM
Michael Moore is a fat money grubing piece of steaming shit. THE END

4moreyears
12-19-2005, 10:40 PM
I wish I had Mod privlidged, I would close this fiction. We need more Ted Kennedy/chappaquidick threads.

WARF
12-20-2005, 01:17 AM
Michael Moore is a genius!

Alex Mogilny
12-20-2005, 09:03 AM
Hasn't this guy been discredited many, many times?

Alex Mogilny
12-20-2005, 09:09 AM
I have a problem with him calling the removal of West's remarks censorship.

Did NBC edit out his remarks....yes.

Let's examine the reasons why.

1. This was a TELETHON.
2. The main object of a TELETHON is to raise money.
3. It is hard to raise money for VICTIMS if political viewpoints turn off arguably half of the viewers.

FORD
12-20-2005, 10:10 AM
Originally posted by Alex Mogilny
I have a problem with him calling the removal of West's remarks censorship.

Did NBC edit out his remarks....yes.

Let's examine the reasons why.

1. This was a TELETHON.
2. The main object of a TELETHON is to raise money.
3. It is hard to raise money for VICTIMS if political viewpoints turn off arguably half of the viewers.

But using the same argument, wouldn't it then make the "other half" more likely to donate? ;)

Kanye West said what millions were thinking at the time. And with good reason, given FEMA's fucked up response.

Maybe you haven't been following the story lately, but two facts have surfaced in the last week or so.

First, there's still some 6,000 people unaccounted for in the New Orleans area.

Second, it's now been determined that most of those who died in the Katrina disaster were not killed in the storm itself, but in the aftermath of the broken levee and the horribly delayed FEMA response.

Viewed from that reality, Kanye West called it accurately in my opinion.

Wayne L.
12-20-2005, 10:14 AM
Kanye West has excellent taste in shoes.

scamper
12-20-2005, 10:33 AM
Originally posted by FORD


it's now been determined that most of those who died in the Katrina disaster were not killed in the storm itself, but in the aftermath of the broken levee and the horribly delayed FEMA response.



and because they didn't leave when told that a hurricane was on its way

diamondD
12-20-2005, 02:34 PM
Originally posted by WARF
Michael Moore is a genius!

Yep, he found a way to bleed money out of liberals and live like a conservative.

Warham
12-20-2005, 04:32 PM
Kanye West is an idiot.

Why doesn't he blame God for the hurricane wiping out black people instead of George W. Bush?

I didn't think so.

FORD
12-20-2005, 04:36 PM
Originally posted by Warham
Kanye West is an idiot.

Why doesn't he blame God for the hurricane wiping out black people instead of George W. Bush?

I didn't think so.

Because God doesn't hate black people.

Warham
12-20-2005, 04:40 PM
Where's the evidence of that? The hurricane took out more black people than white people in New Orleans. That means that Mother Nature, ie. God, has it out for black people more.

I could claim God is a racist as much as you libs will proclaim Bush is a racist.