Lately I hear so much about Michael Moore's prodigious talents as an investigative journalist, film-maker and all-around force for good that I can only wonder what occupied him so thoroughly in the years prior to the toppling of Saddam Hussein's regime.
What led Moore to neglect the victims of what were perhaps the worst human rights abuses of the late 20th century? Surely he could have applied his genius to the making of a movie aimed at relieving the sufferings of Saddam's victims. Where was Michael Moore when the Iraqi people really needed him? San Diego Union letter to the editor.I am actually thinking of mailing this in as a response:
Michael Moore has been famous, since his film "Roger and Me" was released in 1989. His documentaries, are meant to expose the unfairness of, among other things, political special interest groups and faceless corporations such as GM and Nike. His subject matter ranges from their abject hypocrisy, to their anti-union divisiveness, and to their utter greed which manifests itself as exploitation of third world labor, the latter of which is responsible for thousands of domestic jobs being outsourced from the United States.
He has, in the interim, been concentrating on the suffering of the American people, something that this current administration, and past Republican administrations, don't seem to care one little bit about. The "Iraqi People" don't need Michael Moore to fight their battles for them. They have been a culture for thousands of years. This is something that the arrogant individuals of the barely two hundred and thirty year old United States of America, could probably take a lesson from. I for one applaud Michael Moore for having the courage to speak out, and in the process reminding everyone, that there are problems in the United States that we need to address.