Saturday, June 30, 2007

Kurt Loder of MTV Criticizes Michael Moore

The normally left-leaning Loder sees Michael "Sicko" Moore for what he is...a fact-skewing, statement-doctoring Upton Sinclair wannabe.

Loder admits that bringing up the fact that some people have been failed by the health care system is a good thing, but then decries Moore's statements, tactics, and attempts to slam various companies.

"Unfortunately, Moore is also a con man of a very brazen sort, and never more so than in this film. His cherry-picked facts, manipulative interviews (with lingering close-ups of distraught people breaking down in tears) and blithe assertions (how does he know 18 million people will die this year because they have no health insurance?) are so stacked that you can feel his whole argument sliding sideways as the picture unspools. The American health-care system is in urgent need of reform, no question. Some 47 million people are uninsured (although many are only temporarily so, being either in-between jobs or young enough not to feel a pressing need to buy health insurance). There are a number of proposals as to what might be done to correct this situation. Moore has no use for any of them, save one.

As a proud socialist, the director appears to feel that there are few problems in life that can't be solved by government regulation (that would be the same government that's already given us the U.S. Postal Service and the Department of Motor Vehicles). In the case of health care, though, Americans have never been keen on socialized medicine. In 1993, when one of Moore's heroes, Hillary Clinton (he actually blurts out the word 'sexy!' in describing her in the movie), tried to create a government-controlled health care system, her failed attempt to do so helped deliver the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives into Republican control for the next dozen years. Moore still looks upon Clinton's plan as a grand idea, one that Americans, being not very bright, unwisely rejected. (He may be having second thoughts about Hillary herself, though: In the movie he heavily emphasizes the fact that, among politicians, she accepts the second-largest amount of political money from the health care industry.) "

Loder then runs Moore's entire promotion of socialist health care through the meat grinder with references from various sources, and closes with the following...

"Fidel Castro's island dictatorship, now in its 40th year of being listed as a human-rights violator by Amnesty International, is here depicted as a balmy paradise not unlike the Iraq of Saddam Hussein that Moore showed us in his earlier film, 'Fahrenheit 9/11.' He and his charges make their way — their pre-arranged way, if it need be said — to a state-of-the-art hospital where they receive a picturesquely warm welcome. In a voiceover, Moore, shown beaming at his little band of visitors, says he told the Cuban doctors to 'give them the same care they'd give Cuban citizens.' Then he adds, dramatically: 'And they did.'

If Moore really believes this, he may be a greater fool than even his most feverish detractors claim him to be. Nevertheless, medical care is provided to the visiting Americans, and it is indeed excellent. Cuba is in fact the site of some world-class medical facilities (surprising in a country that, as Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar noted in the Los Angeles Times last month, 'imprisoned a doctor in the late 1990s for speaking out against government failure to respond to an epidemic of a mosquito-borne virus'). What Moore doesn't mention is the flourishing Cuban industry of 'health tourism' — a system in which foreigners (including self-admitted multimillionaire film directors and, of course, government bigwigs) who are willing to pay cash for anything from brain-surgery to dental work can purchase a level of treatment that's unavailable to the majority of Cubans with no hard currency at their disposal. The Cuban American National Foundation (admittedly a group with no love for the Castro regime) calls this 'medical apartheid.' And in a 2004 article in Canada's National Post, writer Isabel Vincent quoted a dissident Cuban neurosurgeon, Doctor Hilda Molina, as saying, 'Cubans should be treated the same as foreigners. Cubans have less rights in their own country than foreigners who visit here.'

As the Caribbean sun sank down on Moore's breathtakingly meretricious movie, I couldn't help recalling that when Fidel Castro became gravely ill last year, he didn't put himself in the hands of a Cuban surgeon. No. Instead, he had a specialist flown in — from Spain."

I love it when the truth is told.

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Of course Loder fails to mention that Spain has a system of universal health care as well as a parallel private system. Truth all too often is in the eye of the beholder.

Phil Chroniger said...

anonymous - Thank you for contributing to this post in a positive, thoughtful, and intelligent manner. The overwhelimg genius of your post shines bright like Venus in the evening sky.

Jim - what about the rest of the countries Loder mentioned? They're having their own issues with universal health care, but some refuse to acknowledge these problems.

"Truth all too often is in the eye of the beholder." - that could be said about both sides of many issues.

Anonymous said...

The federal government can't process passports or run the department of motor vehicles and we want them to run our health care why? No thanks!!

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