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The Beginning of History
by John Berger
The (London) Guardian
August 24, 2004

Fahrenheit 9/11 is astounding. Not so much as a film - although it is
cunning and moving - but as an event. Most commentators try to dismiss
the event and disparage the film. We will see why later.

The artists on the Cannes film festival jury apparently voted
unanimously to award Michael Moore's film the Palme d'Or. Since then
it has touched many millions across the world. In the US, its
box-office takings for the first six weeks amounted to more than
$100m, which is, astoundingly, about half of what Harry Potter made
during a comparable period. Only the so-called opinion-makers in the
media appear to have been put out by it.

The film, considered as a political act, may be a historical landmark.
Yet to have a sense of this, a certain perspective for the future is
required. Living only close-up to the latest news, as most
opinion-makers do, reduces one's perspectives. The film is trying to
make a small contribution towards the changing of world history. It is
a work inspired by hope.

What makes it an event is the fact that it is an effective and
independent intervention into immediate world politics. Today it is
rare for an artist to succeed in making such an intervention, and in
interrupting the prepared, prevaricating statements of politicians.
Its immediate aim is to make it less likely that President Bush will
be re-elected next November.

To denigrate this as propaganda is either naive or perverse,
forgetting (deliberately?) what the last century taught us. Propaganda
requires a permanent network of communication so that it can
systematically stifle reflection with emotive or utopian slogans. Its
pace is usually fast. Propaganda invariably serves the long-term
interests of some elite.

This single maverick movie is often reflectively slow and is not
afraid of silence. It appeals to people to think for themselves and
make connections. And it identifies with, and pleads for, those who
are normally unlistened to. Making a strong case is not the same thing
as saturating with propaganda. Fox TV does the latter; Michael Moore
the former.

Ever since the Greek tragedies, artists have, from time to time, asked
themselves how they might influence ongoing political events. It's a
tricky question because two very different types of power are
involved. Many theories of aesthetics and ethics revolve round this
question. For those living under political tyrannies, art has
frequently been a form of hidden resistance, and tyrants habitually
look for ways to control art. All this, however, is in general terms
and over a large terrain. Fahrenheit 9/11 is something different. It
has succeeded in intervening in a political programme on the
programme's own ground.

For this to happen a convergence of factors were needed. The Cannes
award and the misjudged attempt to prevent the film being distributed
played a significant part in creating the event.

To point this out in no way implies that the film as such doesn't
deserve the attention it is receiving. It's simply to remind ourselves
that within the realm of the mass media, a breakthrough (a smashing
down of the daily wall of lies and half-truths) is bound to be rare.
And it is this rarity which has made the film exemplary. It is setting
an example to millions - as if they'd been waiting for it.

The film proposes that the White House and Pentagon were taken over in
the first year of the millennium by a gang of thugs so that US power
should henceforth serve the global interests of the corporations: a
stark scenario which is closer to the truth than most nuanced
editorials. Yet more important than the scenario is the way the movie
speaks out. It demonstrates that - despite all the manipulative power
of communications experts, lying presidential speeches and vapid press
conferences - a single independent voice, pointing out certain home
truths which countless Americans are already discovering for
themselves, can break through the conspiracy of silence, the
atmosphere of fear and the solitude of feeling politically impotent.

It's a movie that speaks of obstinate faraway desires in a period of
disillusion. A movie that tells jokes while the band plays the
apocalypse. A movie in which millions of Americans recognise
themselves and the precise ways in which they are being cheated. A
movie about surprises, mostly bad but some good, being discussed
together. Fahrenheit 9/11 reminds the spectator that when courage is
shared one can fight against the odds.

In more than a thousand cinemas across the country, Michael Moore
becomes with this film a people's tribune. And what do we see? Bush is
visibly a political cretin, as ignorant of the world as he is
indifferent to it; while the tribune, informed by popular experience,
acquires political credibility, not as a politician himself, but as
the voice of the anger of a multitude and its will to resist.

There is something else which is astounding. The aim of Fahrenheit
9/11 is to stop Bush fixing the next election as he fixed the last.
Its focus is on the totally unjustified war in Iraq. Yet its
conclusion is larger than either of these issues. It declares that a
political economy which creates colossally increasing wealth
surrounded by disastrously increasing poverty, needs - in order to
survive - a continual war with some invented foreign enemy to maintain
its own internal order and security. It requires ceaseless war.

Thus, 15 years after the fall of communism, a decade after the
declared end of history, one of the main theses of Marx's
interpretation of history again becomes a debating point and a
possible explanation of the catastrophes being lived.

It is always the poor who make the most sacrifices, Fahrenheit 9/11
announces quietly during its last minutes. For how much longer?

There is no future for any civilisation anywhere in the world today
which ignores this question. And this is why the film was made and
became what it became.


A SHORT COMMENT ON THE ABOVE ARTICLE.


Interesting,  but hardly unbiased.  The Guardian is a left wing UK
newspaper, whose editorial outlook is far to the left of liberal.  Also
the article is promoted by Moore himself. Hardly a good recommendation.
While not discounting all that is written there, I would suggest that,
as in most of these issues, the truth is somewhere in the middle.  This
whole debate is bringing out the worst in journalism on all sides.

Brian (an English fellow).
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

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