Originally Posted by Yoda
If you're going to claim that he "ran away" from it, you've got to demonstrate that the National Guard was, in fact, a refuge for those deliberately avoiding battle. It's an accusation serious enough that simply repeating something read in an article about what is allegedly "common knowledge" is not sufficient.
As for a "war he supported" -- I've read many a quote from Bush saying that it was a "political war." I'm not saying you're wrong, but what leads you to believe Bush supported the war in Vietnam?
Well, training in the use of a basically obsolete plane (i.e. never going to see service abroad) does reinforce this idea that many people claim - that the NG at the time was a way of avoiding the draft. I haven't seen enough anecdotal evidence to "prove" it certainly, but the implication is that if you wanted to avoid fighting, that
was one way of doing it. (and i just have a low opinion of the Bush clan, so i'm totally ready to believe they'd take that course

. Not that they had any influence on him skipping past the queue and getting in with low entrance score etc. No no

)
(EDIT: Even Colin Powell believes this idea about NG-action-dodging it seems
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...l=chi-news-col
- like i say, many people suggest that i could be used in that way. And there are reasons to believe that's how Bush used it. Like the way it seems he ..."enlisted in the Texas Air National Guard
12 days before he was to lose his student deferment in 1968"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2004Feb14.html
...and mysteriously jumped passed that big queue)
I must admit i assumed Bush would have supported the war from his political orientation, and because those who were against it were normally pretty vocal. If he was vocally against it we would have heard about it by now you'd imagine (and he wouldn't be using bland terminology like "political"

, unless he was refusing to talk about his past again

)
EDIT: Guess stuff like this snuck into my subconscious when i read it

:
"he said he had backed the government and would have gone if his unit was called up."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3477833.stm
Which is marvellous - only, again, the plane he was trained in was never going to be "called up". It had a role already apparently - defending the US from enemy bombers (damn those vietnamese bombing runs), and was basically phased out of offensive duties.
Originally Posted by Yoda
I wouldn't even know where to begin. Simple physics make his confrontation with Charlton Heston dubious to the point at which one could reasonably call it dishonest...the shot cuts back and forth in a narrow walkway, but both angles (one showing Moore, one showing Heston) could not have been shot simultaneously, seeing as how no camera is shown in either.
There's a fine line between stretching the truth and lying, a line which the "Wonderful World" montage straddles far more than any self-proclaimed "documentary" ought to. Moore believes that because his overall message is correct, his skewing is justified to make a point. I would hope that more sensible folks like yourself, Gol, would refrain from defending him for what I presume are similar reasons.
I defend Moore (to an extent) on two counts: One is that he's been accused of lying in multiple ways that have proved to be false. The other is that he does occasionally turn up interesting little "facts" - the point is, in this spin-seeped world we live in, it's everyone's duty to judge the bias in everything we watch and take it all with a big pinch of salt. (and believe me, i chew over Moore's "facts" a lot, until they're a more swallowable shape

)
My memories of the Heston interview are that he makes Heston look uncomfortable, and contextually - bad (aren't the directing tricks you're talking about standard practice in near every single doc-interview?? - tho i agree how they're used is important). Moore is childish for doing this, yes. Negatively-spinning one man's life is bad yes - But within the spectrum of Moore's "achievements" (one of which is provoking debate), i'm willing to let it go.
Which bits/facts/arrangements of the "wonderful world" segment do you particularly object to?
(i agree on this one to an extent - but again, the pinch of salt comes in. Just as it should when a newscaster or official claims everything's hunky-dorey in Iraq

)
You seem to think there's a big list of these "lies". Can you bring out some more concrete examples?