| Review: Michael Moore's "Capitalism" | | Print | |
| Written by Charles Scaliger | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Friday, 09 October 2009 07:50 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Because Moore has never been one to mince words or shy away from extravagant spectacle, Capitalism is an entertaining indictment of American business and financial practices, intercut with scenes of Moore raising a ruckus on Wall Street — cordoning off the AIG headquarters with yellow crime scene tape, or trying to force his way past unyielding rent-a-cops at Bank of America to make “citizen’s arrests” of culpable bank executives. In truth, Moore exposes a fair bit of the corporate, financial, and political skullduggery that laid the groundwork for the great economic crisis of our time. Photo: AP Images
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Bonnie
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... Another farcical comedy from Michael Moore. Personally, I prefer Monty Python... funnier and more historically accurate. |
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Flu-Bird
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Another moore liar movie Micheal Moore is a liar and a fruad his films are lies and fruads and his oscar should be taken away |
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jimmy
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... another propaganda piece from the m. moore propaganda machine...goebbles will be proud of his followers. |
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Jim
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Plutocracy As a Keynesian liberal I've taken an interest in the 'End the Fed' movement, which is what this 'movie review' is really all about. What anti-government, free marketeers seem to ignore is that without an increased money supply there would be ZERO opportunity for the bottom 95% of this country to own a home, go to college, or afford an automobile. Even Milton Friedman, a right-wing demigod, understood that growing populations and emerging world economies require expanding money to meet the needs of ever-increasing and more demanding consumers. To think that 'sound money' will somehow reverse our fortunes is absurd, and Moore's analogy of fighting over one slice of pie is very appropriate. Central banks exist around the world because central banks represent nations - paper money of a nation does not need to be tied to commodities as it is valued in the roads, homes, tanks, buildings, etc. that the money is loaned to create. The problems we are facing today are the result of a service-based economy - specifically financial services - that have ballooned to an absurd percentage of GDP and that produce NOTHING. Money & wealth are purely fictional, whether counted in dollars, francs, gold, or oil it is merely perception that makes them valuable. Until people accept that everything related to finance is simply a matter of faith, we will never have true progress on this issue... |
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Regni
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Are you kidding? CS, What happened in the last years did not teach you anything? We live a society not in a jungle. Do you want to continue allowing thieves as Madoff and AIG crooks to operate free? |
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Veritas Aequitas
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... @Regni What happened in the last years was a result of Big Government programs and handouts mixed with a splash of corruption created by the government vices on the free market. Capitalism is not to blame. Government is. We have this urge to blame the free market system for EVERY problem with the economy, while most are created by the hands of government. We have not had a TRUE free market system for quite some time. Madoff was an example of a pyramid scheme. Kind of like Social Security, MediCare, MedicAid, etc. They pay for one group on the backs of another and in the end they are both screwed when the gravy train comes to a halt. Open your eyes man. Michael Moore is a piece of s**t. He makes up falsehoods and touts them in "documentaries" as if they were true. Every movie he's made have been made up of lie after lie. Inform yourself instead of being informed by others. Also, the movie is about how "evil" capitalism is, yet why is it he didn't make the movie free to the public? Think about that one. |
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Michael E. Russell
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Usury Reloaded First, I love Michael Moore, and respect his quests for social justice. He is a DAVID for those too weak to defend themselves against the "inequalities of talent and circumstance". So, I applaud CHARLES SCALIGER in his free admission that Moore's points about the criminality of the skullduggery and fraud perpetrated by the money-traders of our financial sector (people who produce nothing of value and live as wealthy parasites upon those who do) are valid points, and well made at that. I also like the fact that CHARLES SCALIGER lays the blame for this economic collapse of the capitalist system at the feet of the G.W. Bush administration and the 'big government' that the "Conservative" Rebublicans created, exactly where it belongs. But, altho I agree that Moore's hyperbole about equating 'CAPITALISM' with 'EVIL' is over the top, I must reject the premise that government is the problem. Because I understand that Michael is just trying to use capitalistic strategies to shift the debate. He is "low-balling" the voting public, trying to push the debate to the opposite extreme from the greed of materialistic gluttony of our time, so that we can haggle for some middle-ground of JUST-FREE-TRADE. It's social satire, for a purpose. |
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Michael E. Russell
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Usury 2 I have to disagree with the ridiculous idea that "government intervention" is at fault for our economic woe. The capital that funded the de-regulation of our economy, and the political strategies that maliciously cause government to be ineffective, complex, and elitist, are all tools of the capitalists, paid for by capitalists, for the profit of capitalists. The problem is not the government itself, government is a necessary tool, the alternative being war, or worse, a lawless violent anarchy. The problem is the capital that corrupts our political system, it is the laziness and greed of people who lack the moral courage or ethical ability to work for the good of our country. In this government of the people, by the people, for the people, if the honest people don't step up, then only the dishonest will prevail. |
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Michael E. Russell
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Democracy is not a spectator sport. If those who complain about "big government" would get off there ass and do their part in the political process then the corruption would be at worst shared among all, and likely destroyed by the natural immune system of rational thought. This requires eliminating the influence of money from our system of government. Taking the right to political speech away from all immortal persons. Corporations are not people, they should have no influence on our systems of government. Only the people, one-man-one-vote, should have such rights in a free democracy. Note that "inequalities of circumstance" are inherently unjust, but completely correctable, while "inequalities of talent" are not. Luckily, talent is a quality completely independent of heritage or circumstance. The world is unfair, but it is we who make it unjust. Trade is only free when everyone involved has their basic needs met, all else is extortion. |
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J. Sanchaz
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Who is Michael Moore...Really? Who is Michael Moore...Really? http://www.speroforum.com/a/18233/Who-is-Michael-Moore-really |
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Subtlety has never been one of filmmaker Michael Moore’s strong suits. And the latest offering from Hollywood’s pre-eminent leftist “documentarian,” Capitalism: A Love Story, is, like most of Moore’s work, about as subtle as a fuel-air bomb.
