Michael
Moore has made quite a name for himself as well as a nice chunk of
change with pseudo documentaries like “Bowling for Columbine” and
“Fahrenheit 9/11.” In
his latest release Mr. Moore rightly points to some very troubling
aspects of the Bush administration and its many shortcomings in both its
foreign and domestic policies. Where Mr. Moore begins to loose most of
his credibility is when he implies that by electing Mr. Gore (or Mr.
Kerry) our problems as a nation would be improved upon or placated.
Recently
Mr. Moore has pointed his criticism at
Miami
's large Cuban Exile Community.
Statements like, “It is [in
Miami
] that a nutty bunch of Cuban exiles have controlled
U.S.
foreign policy regarding this insignificant island nation. These Cubans,
many of whom were Batista supporters and lived high on the hog while
that crook ran the country, seem not to have slept a wink since they
grabbed their assets and headed to
Florida
” only serve to show that Mr. Moore is a slave to sensationalism and
has little regard for facts. In reality, Batista supporters comprise a
minute part of
Miami
's Cuban exile community (few exiles would argue that Batista was not a
crook, amongst other things). The
truth is that it's composed of a wide array of groups ranging from
extreme right wing factions to socialist and pseudo communist. But the
truth is not always sensational nor profitable, so Mr. Moore chooses to
ignore it.
Mr. Moore correctly points out that “U.S.-based Cuban terrorist
organizations have been responsible for more than 200 bombings and at
least 100 murders since Castro's revolution.”
Unfortunately, this is not the whole story. Mr. Moore chooses to
turn a blind eye to the fact that his “amigo” ( as well as Oliver
Stone’s and Steven Spielberg’s) Fidel Castro's tyrannical government
in Havana is directly responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of
human beings all over the globe as well as the enslavement of the
island’s entire population.
The
flamboyant producer adds, "I am, after all, one of the few unarmed Americans."
It is Mr. Moore's right to choose to be unarmed, but he makes it obvious
that if he had things his way, all the citizens (other than the police
and the military) would be forced to disarm. A sentiment shared by Fidel
Castro, who as soon as he took power proceeded to disarm the Cuban
populace with his famous "armas para que" (Weapons, what for?)
speech.
Mr.
Moore attempts to show his own bravado with declarations like,
“Because these Cuban exiles, for all their chest-thumping and
terrorism, are really just a
bunch of wimps. That's right. Wimps. Need proof? For starters, when you
don't like the oppressor in your country, you stay there and try to
overthrow him . . . . But you don't just turn tail and run like these
Cubans.” Perhaps Mr.
Moore
is not aware of the existence of thousands of men like Jorge Villalta
(my wife's uncle) who paid the ultimate price at the failed
Bay of Pigs
invasion, or Colonel (US Air Force, Retired) Matias Farias who was
seriously injured when his propeller-powered B-26 bomber was shot down
over Cuban skies by Castro's jet-powered MIGs. The word "wimp"
does not seem to describe these Cubans correctly, but reality is
something Michael Moore is only concerned with when it supports his
version of the "facts."
Even Elian Gonzalez's
deceased mother was the recipient of criticism from the
plump producer. In an open letter to the young Cuban rafter,
Moore
writes, “You are being told that your mother died trying to bring you
to freedom. I am so sorry to have to tell you, that's not true. The
Cuban court granted your father custody of you, and your mother decided
to kidnap you.” Defending
a decision by the current Cuban legal system is the equivalent of
arguing in favor of the legitimacy and integrity of the German court
system under the Nazis.
But
Mr. Moore's most revealing statement is, “She placed your life in
horrible
jeopardy by putting you in a leaky, overcrowded raft that eventually
sank, killing everyone
except you and two others . . . . The worst that could be said is that,
in
Cuba
, you were in jeopardy of receiving free health care whenever you needed
it, an excellent education in one of the few countries that has 100%
literacy, and a better chance of your baby brother being born and making
it
to his first birthday than if he had been born in
Washington
,
D.C.
” This shows that Mr.
Moore is not only a good propagandist but believes others’ good
propaganda as well. The reason hundreds of thousands of Cuban's have
risked their lives to leave the communist gulag is because the very
system that Mr. Moore defends robs every individual of his humanity and
denies them any possibility of any worthwhile existence. Elian's mother
had been raised in this environment, so she decided to take the ultimate
risk rather than have her child endure what she had up to that point in
her life.
Cuba
's educational system is one of indoctrination where any spirit of
individual freedom a child may have is obliterated and destroyed. The
most distinguishing fact about
Cuba
's health care system that the Twinkie-loving
Moore
so ardently defends is that most of its doctors are driving cabs or
busing tables.
Mr. Moore's logic, like that of many of his critics on the right, is
slanted
and flawed. He complains (and rightly so) about abuses of power by the
Bush administration, yet if
he had it his way, we would also be denied many freedoms that are the
cornerstone of individual rights and freedom. In the end, a dissection
of Mr. Moore's thought process does not reveal a freedom-loving and
concerned individual, but rather an opportunistic, calorically
challenged, razor
phobic
and frustrated tyrant in waiting.