Monday, October 06, 2008 |
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A Flawed, Funny, Furious Attack on Faith |
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Posted by:
Michael Medved at
1:05 AM |
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The new movie “Religulous” features comedian and ardent atheist Bill Maher arguing with believers of various denominations in order to make them look stupid and deluded. Filmed by the same director behind the outrageous mock documentary “Borat,” the movie provides some uneasy laughs—showing a Bible-exploiting, Democratic U.S.Senator who expresses gratitude that there’s no IQ requirement for election to Congress, or highlighting a Holy Land theme park in Florida which stages its own crucifixion every day. The cheap shots at organized faith, however, involve three areas of fundamental unfairness.
First, and most obviously, Maher selects easy and vulnerable targets for his sneering assaults on God and Jesus. He never chooses to interview formidable religious intellects, like author Dinesh D’Souza, or theologian Al Mohler, or evangelist Ravi Zacarias. Instead he focuses on oddballs like the portly proprietor of a religious curios shop, or the surfer dude who plays Jesus in those theme park crucifixions, or the sleazy, pompadoured Latino evangelist who claims he’s the reincarnated Christ. On the rare occasions that the movie shows him in conversation with a serious thinker (such as Dr. Francis Collins of the Human Genome Project) the interchange is edited to avoid substance and to highlight Maher’s insulting zingers.
Second, the movie concentrates its fire on Christianity in its various forms while giving a free pass to the most dangerous elements of radical Islam. Islamic fanatics and jihadists obviously passed up the chance to talk with Bill Maher (or, perhaps Maher wisely made scant attempt to talk with them), so the only Muslims he encounters look harmless and clueless—like the pair of nerdy middle-aged guys trying to start a gay encounter group for the Islamic community in Amsterdam. Only at the end of the film does Maher make significant reference to Islamo-Nazi terror, and he does so to warn of an alleged world-ending threat from religion in general – conflating the dangers of Islam, Christianity and Judaism (Hinduism and Buddhism are all but ignored) as if each of the Abrahamic faiths counted as equally menacing. A frightening montage cuts together images of burning buildings on 9/11 and Osama bin Laden, with footage of Pope Benedict, President Bush and devout Jews in prayer.
Finally, Maher scrupulously avoids any honest examination of his own spiritual state or pursuit of happiness. At one point, he interacts with his mother and derisively recalls his Catholic upbringing, but there’s no hint as to whether his anti-religious path has led him to enlightenment and satisfaction or merely to bitter loneliness. Since Maher has established himself as a famous and rich comedian, we’re obviously meant to assume that he’s achieved some sort of happiness or fulfillment. But he never reflects on his own lack of a wife, children or family, or his comments elsewhere about his enthusiastic indulgence in drugs and hookers. A bit of honest self-examination might have helped shape a far richer, more provocative film, by undermining Maher’s pose of smug superiority in encountering religious people whose lives, by conventional standards, count as far more “together” and rewarding than his disconnected and decadent celebrity existence.
As a politically correct documentary, “Religulous” demonstrates far more skillful editing and writing than any of Michael Moore’s over-praised screeds, and delivers moments of outrageous and even inventive humor. Even those of us strongly committed to our faith traditions will find laughter impossible to resist at many points in the film. Nevertheless, its snide tone never rises above childish or, more accurately, adolescent contempt, and Maher’s running commentary never even hints at the benefits for believers that keep religion such a potent force throughout the United States. Maher’s concluding fire-and-brimstone sermon (there is no other phrase) flatly declares that the world would find itself greatly and profoundly improved if every form of faith simply disappeared and humanity learned to live in the pure, cold, blinding sunlight of materialist reason.
To follow up on that concept, perhaps Maher’s next project could feature visits to those favored areas of the planet where religion has already vanished, thanks to the efforts of enlightened and determined leaders. North Korea or Cuba might provide ideal places to begin such a tour, and we can only wish Bill Maher luck in negotiating permission from such benevolent and religion-free governments.
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Sunday, October 05, 2008 |
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Media Morning |
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Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
8:00 AM |
I'll be on CNN's Reliable Sources with Howard Kurtz this morning sometime in the 10am EDT hour to do Sarah Palin debate recap.
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Saturday, October 04, 2008 |
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Thought Police at the Rocky Mountain News |
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Posted by:
Matt Lewis at
12:13 PM |
Writing in today's Rocky Mountain News, Bridget Johnson objects to my objecting to conservative writers who prematurely jumped ship on Sarah Palin.
She writes,
"... isn’t it imperative to listen to the representative voices chiming in on key issues? Or does this dissent threaten cohesiveness of a party agenda and require censures of noncompliant individuals in a manner reminiscent of the tasks undertaken by China’s Internet police." ... So let me get this straight. It's okay for Johnson to criticize my expression of "dissent," but if I do the same thing (object to something a columnist wrote), then I'm behaving like "China's Internet police"???
She goes on to write that, "party line, groupthink mentality is characteristic of the communist societies I loathe so much."
Her overblown and offensive rhetoric (essentially comparing my writing to communism) becomes especially ridiculous when you consider that Kathleen Parker's column can be found right here at Towhall.com!
Let's be honest about this double-standard: Liberal viewpoints (or, with 30 days to go until the election, any criticism of Sarah Palin) are defended and celebrated by the MSM, while conservative expression of dissent is compared to "China's Internet police".
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Friday, October 03, 2008 |
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Bill O'Reilly Calls Barney Frank OUT |
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Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
10:24 AM |
O'Reilly was on FIRE last night with Barney Frank.
The Factor man replayed a clip of Frank saying:
FRANK: "Fannie and Freddie are fundamentally sound, but they are not in danger of going under, they're not be the best investments these days from the long term standpoint coming back. I think they are in good shape going forward...they're housing market, I do that prospects going foward are very solid and in fact we are going to do some things to improve them." O'Reilly asked Frank why Americans shouldn't be mad at him for lying. Frank clings to his admission the housing market may "not be the best investment" these days and completely disregards everything he said about being "fundamentally sound" and "in good shape going forward."
Bill tells Frank he's spewing "B.S." and that he's a coward. "You didn't say that? You want me to play it again for ya?"
"Stop the BS! Stop the crap!"
This is a MUST WATCH:
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Friday, October 03, 2008 |
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Beyond the Politics with Bill Bennett |
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Posted by:
Matt Lewis at
9:49 AM |
Bill Bennett will be hosting his own program on CNN this weekend called Beyond the Politics with Bill Bennett.
The program will air on Saturday, October 4th at 8:00 p.m. (eastern) and again on Sunday, October 5th at 2:00 p.m. (eastern). His guests will be David Gelernter, Amy Holmes, Steve Waldman & Alan Wolfe.
Overall theme of the program is the state of American culture and the health of our institutions.
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Friday, October 03, 2008 |
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People Are Weird |
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Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
9:28 AM |
This morning I was scheduled for a 7:30am appearance on CSPAN's Washington Journal to do debate wrap-up. So, I hopped in a cab to get downtown around, I dunno, say 6:45am to be there at 7am. Ok, no big deal, right?
As soon as I climb into the cab, I notice the driver is exceptionally chipper and helpful, asking what is the best way to go, do I need a receipt, whatever. We get down the block and I settle in to do some final reading on my blackberry and he asks me if I like poetry.
"Uh, sure. I guess." He asks if I'd like to hear some.
"About what?" I say sort of incredulously. "Anything you want, sex, drugs, rock and roll, hope, change." Oh Lord, I'm saying to myself. Anything but hope and change. I have met a real life Vogon. I tell him I need to do my reading.
He lets me read until we get three blocks from the studio. "I really have this good one about hope and change." Why me. I want to tell him I am a rabid Republican, but he's driving. He has my life in his hands. I encounter similar things with hairdressers in this part of the country. I keep my mouth shut on these occasions. I do not like car wrecks or bad hair.
So he proceeds to adopt whatever, weird scholarly voice people use to recite poetry and opines about "hope and change" for the last leg of the drive. And something about seasons changing, too Strangely enough it did not mention Obama outright, but I got the point. And, he was totally making it up as he went along. Stream of conscience taxicab poetry.
I did not compliment him and kept pretending to read my blackberry. That only would encourage him. I wanted to stiff him on the tip just to reinforce the non-verbal message, but I figured that's too mean. I've worked too many waitress jobs myself to do that.
What a day to start the day.
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Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
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On the Factor Last Night |
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Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
11:55 AM |
Three topics last night, that creepy, creepy "Sing for Change" video, conservative and liberal opposition to the bailout and Sarah Palin singing her flute.
We didn't spend nearly enough time on why conservatives hate the bailout, IMO.
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Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
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Fox News Kills the Ratings Again |
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Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
10:01 AM |
From TVNewser: "Fox News Channel had eight of the top 10 programs in Total Viewers during the third quarter of 2008."
O'Reilly was the number one show, Hannity was two.
This is the 27th consecutive quarter Fox News has been the #1 news channel. And there's good news for retiring anchor Brit Hume, too. In this quarter, which is expected to be Hume's last full quarter, he's enjoying his highest total quarterly total viewer average EVER.
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Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
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Multicultural Folly Undermines Americanization |
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Posted by:
Michael Medved at
1:02 AM |
Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal provides an inspiring example of a child of Hindu immigrants who embraced traditional Americanism to become a “Good Ol’ Boy” and, ultimately, a wildly popular leader across all ethnic lines. He took the name “Bobby” as a boy from TV’s “The Brady Bunch” and converted to Catholicism in high school. This led Deborah Solomon of New York Times Magazine to pose a profoundly obnoxious question: “If the Republican Party bills itself as the party of family values, what should we make of the fact that you rejected the name your parents gave you, their political affiliation and their religion?” Solomon ignores the importance of a larger American family, with distinctive traditions that newcomers should enthusiastically adopt. National fragmentation stems not from immigration, but from multicultural foolishness that undermines the assimilation process.
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