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New Reagan Memorial Edition Exclusively in the Print Edition CounterPunch

Pentagon Cartoons; Hollywood Fantasies into Political Policy; From Fort Wacky to Bitburg; Star Wars, the Enron of Its Day; Touching the Gipper's Hair; How Reagan Made Clinton by Alexander Cockburn; When Reagan Was King and AIDS Was Raging: Joking About the Terminally Ill by Larry Speakes and the White House Press Corps; Parallel Lives: Watt, Reagan and Brower: by Jeffrey St. Clair; Fortress Baghdad; Iraqi Fury by Patrick Cockburn; Troy, the Iliad and Iraq by Jeffrey St. Clair. In May, CounterPunch Online was read by more than 20 million viewers! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation for the online edition. Remember contributions are tax--deductible. Click here to make a (tax deductible) donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

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Today's Stories

June 19 / 20, 2004

Diane Christian
Morality and Death: a Meditation on Bush and Blake

Walter A. Davis
Passion of the Christ in Abu Ghraib

Josh Frank
How Democrats Helped Bush Rape Mother Nature

Col. Dan Smith
Respectable Genocide?: the Crisis in Sudan

Brian Cloughley
A Profound Disruption of the Senses

Bruce Anderson
Frozen Gringos

 

June 18, 2004

Chris Floyd
Blood Victory

Dave Zirin
Danielle Green, Basketball Player & Disabled Vet, Speaks Out Against War

Justin E.H. Smith
The Christian Question in American Politics

Gary Leupp
The "Long-Established" Link?: Iraq, al-Qaeda, and al-Zarqawi

 

June 17, 2004

Noel Ignatiev
Zionism, Anti-Semitism and the People of Palestine

Kurt Nimmo
The Bush-Kerry Conundrum

Ed Cardoni
The Persecution of Steve Kurtz

Ron Jacobs
Power Relations: Rounding Up Everyone Who Knows More Than They Do

Dave Lindorff
Philly Daily News: "Four Wasted Years"

Greg Moses
Geneva Ignored

Norm Dixon
How Reagan Armed Saddam with Chemical Weapons

 

June 16, 2004

Lenni Brenner
A Question for Kerry Supporters

Davey D
Hip Hop Reflections on Reagan

Daniel Wolff
Why Did Michael Moore Withhold Video Evidence of US Prisoner Abuse?

Bruce Jackson
Harry Levin and the Penultimate Manuscript of Finnegans Wake

Patrick Cockburn
Boom! Boom! Out Go the Lights: Bombings Target Oil and Power Facilities

Gary Handschumacher
Mourn Ben Linder, Not His Killer: Reagan's Death Squads

JG
Turning Haiti into One Big Sweatshop

Mario Benedetti
Obituary with Cheers

Vicente Navarro
Meet the New Head of the IMF: Who is Rodrigo Rato?

Website of the Day
Iraqi Oil Revenue Watch


June 15, 2004

Harry Browne
Ireland Adds a Brick to Fortress Europe

Neve Gordon
The Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited

David Palmer
Richard Armitage, Abu Ghraib and CACI

John Blair
Lovelock's Misguided Call: Nukes Are No Solution to Global Warming

Dave Lindorff
God Wins in TKO

Bill Quigley
Blood-Pouring Peace Activists: State Charges Dropped; Feds Step In

Patrick Cockburn
Carbombs and Street Dances: 13 More Killed in Baghdad Blast

John Chuckman
John Kerry, Political Placebo

June 14, 2004

John Stanton / Wayne Madsen
Torture, Inc: Oliver North Joins the Party

Kathy Kelly
Requiems: What Happens When Compassion Dies?

Bruce Jackson
Bush Gets Testy About Torture

Lee Sustar
Strikers Defy Visteon's Company Thugs

Kurt Nimmo
The Desperate Censors: the Republican Plot to Kill Farhenheit 9/11

Jim Davis
Hard Right Nativism

Eliot Katz
Death and War

Uri Avnery
The Nightmare Comes True

Website of the Day
Instruments of Statecraft

 


June 12 / 13, 2004

Peter Linebaugh
Remembering the Common Hood: Soweto and Runnymede

Team CounterPunch
CP's Favorite Albums

Jeffrey St. Clair
Troy, Now and Then

Gary Leupp
Not Really a Puppet Government in Iraq?

Brian Cloughley
US Military in Crisis

Antonio Ponvert, III
Iraqi Prisoner Abuse: the Connecticut Connection

Ben Tripp
The Polls Get Stupider

Joe Bageant
Mash Note to the "Girl with the Leash"

Ron Jacobs
The Return of the Hip Hop Insurgency

Forrest Hylton
Object Lessons from the Case of Francisco Cortés

Christopher Brauchli
Federal Bureau of Errors

Kurt Nimmo
Going After Qaddafi, Again

Wayne Madsen
Israel's Slap at Reagan

Anthony Loewenstein
Al Jazeera Awakens the Arab World

Michael Donnelly
A Lightship in the Forest: Greenpeace Docks in the Siskiyous

Greg Moses
Who Will Tell Us More About the Workers of Nasiriyah?

Susan Davis
Harry Potter & the Prisoner of Azkaban

Joseph Ramsey
Weather Report: a Review of The Weather Underground

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The 18th Brumaire in the 21st Century

Wayne Saunders
The Gipper, D-Day and the Stanley Cup

Poets' Basement
Richey, Ford, La Morticella, Albert

Website of the Weekend
Insurgent Music

 

 


June 19 / 20, 2004

Frozen Gringos

The Day After Tomorrow: Don't Go There

By BRUCE ANDERSON

The movie "The Day After Tomorrow" is the single most moronic film I've seen since "Bill and Coo," an epic I was dragged to as a child, circa 1950. Bill and Coo were talking parakeets, The Day After Tomorrow is talking cretins.

The subject is global warming, kind of, which results in an overnight quick freeze of the northern hemisphere. As New York City is hit by serial tsunamis which overnight turn millions of people to multi-cultural ice cubes (all of it reported by the Fox Network whose logo appears constantly on screen in all kinds of contexts because Rupert Murdoch owns the Fox Network AND the movie) a cast of imbeciles sets out to save us from ourselves. But it's too late. The lands of the white man are now subject to such severe weather they are rendered uninhabitable. Not that there are many whiteys left to inhabit them. If the sudden freezes don't get them, the high tides and the tornadoes will. (It occurred to me that The Day After Tomorrow will undoubtedly be very popular in the Arab countries.)

The sole opportunity for something interesting to happen in the movie occurs near the end when our president freezes to death trying to get out of popsicle-ized DC and his successor, made up to resemble Dick Cheney, orders Americans to haul ass south for the border. Now if Anderson Valley Advertiser or CounterPunch readers had made the film, our fellow citizens, upon reaching San Ysidro, would have been turned back by the Mexican Army. "Tough tamales, gringos. You bastards think you're going to get into the warm weather after what you've done to us all these years?" But in this thing, the Mexicans are happy as hell to take on a two hundred and fifty million of US as President Cheney advises Americans to hit the road for Mexico and points south for "what we used to call the Third World."

Nice bit of straight-up racism in that one, but it's read off without so much as a hint of irony. What we used to call the Third World! The gringos have arrived so you folks just got promoted to the First World! If you're thinking of paying your way into seen "The Day After Tomorrow," you might want to think again.

Here's the story line: Dennis Quaid and a Scotsman are the only two scientists in the world who understand why LA is suddenly besieged by serial tornadoes. Nobody will listen to the only two guys who know the deep freeze is next. Quaid's son and the kid's love interest, both of whom are beyond vapid, are first stranded by tidal waves sweeping clean over the Big Apple and, when the high tides freeze over in 15 minutes, sonny boy and sweet thing hole up in the New York Public Library with exactly one black street person, the street guy's dog, and a bunch of generically presentable white people. (More racism, but who's counting at this point?) When the kid gets real cold, sweetie pie saves him from hypothermia via -- you guessed it! -- a prolonged round of rubbsies, solemnly explaining that as a high school honor student she'd learned in her advanced placement physiology class that a freezing man can quickly be thawed out if a 19-year-old girl with large breasts and bee stung lips dry humps him in front of a roaring fire.

Everyone outside the library had frozen to death early on, and not for lack of nymphets either. It was real cold, colder than it had ever been anywhere on earth, even way the hell up north at Santa's workshop. The people who'd frozen to death outside had been too damn dumb to retreat to the top floor of the library when the water rose above their arm pits, so Darwin got 'em.

When the big waves froze and every living thing died except a pack of wolves, Quaid's kid and a couple of his underwear ad buddies fight them off, naturally, while botox lips and the nice white people inside the library feed their life-saving fire in the library's huge, decorative fire place with rare books. The black street guy and his dog, incidentally, never get close to the fire; they stand watch at the door, reporting on the latest catastrophe outside, like when an ocean liner becomes part of an iceberg on the front steps. A skinny, effete guy with big glasses -- guess who he is -- gives a speech about how he'll freeze to death before he tosses the Gutenberg Bible into the fire. Who else besides skinny, effete guys with glasses read books or care what happens to them? Fat beatniks, that's who, but no complications, no ironies were allowed into this filmic extravaganza.

No sirree. Anyhoo, because the librarian is a librarian, he's responsible for Western Civ's key artifacts, and he draws the line at the Gutenberg. (Actually, THIS movie is a lot more representative of Western Civ's net accomplishment than the printing press, but there's probably some dissent on the question, the issue being relative value in a value-free epoch.) Quaid sets out on foot in sub-Arctic conditions to check on his son. Dad says he wants to forgive the lad for flunking a high school math test. Most parents, of course, would settle for their kids not flunking drug and drunk driving tests, but we're talking scholars here, and scholars and other securely upper-middle-class people are not only very nice people, so are their kids.

"I've walked farther than this in the snow," Quaid says, setting out from the DC 'burbs for a snow shoes and family values hike to Manhattan. Mrs. Quaid is a doctor, occasionally assisted by an Asian woman with timely references to Native American prophecies. My fellow movie goers I am here to tell you that no major ethnic group goes unrepresented! Mrs. Quaid, MD, looks very, very concerned and very, very compassionate. I could tell because her eyes got bigger and wetter the colder it got and the longer she was left behind in a frigid hospital ward with an eight-year-old leukemia patient while everyone else got into their LL Beans and highballed it for Ensenada and Sao Paolo. Mrs. Q. and the bald kid are presented for no other reason than to demonstrate that the Quaids are nice people, and Mrs. Q is double nice. The emphasis throughout was The Tragic Effect On Nice White People Caught Up In A Cataclysmic Event. I felt like laughing out loud a whole lot of times, especially when LA was wiped out, but I was in a mall theater in Springfield, Oregon, surrounded by solemn viewers who seemed to think they were watching a documentary. Audible laughter while the end of the world was under consideration might have been severely misunderstood.

The only good thing about the movie was an on-screen blurb at the end that said our fatso-watso ways of living were killing the planet, a statement of the obvious to everyone in the world except George Bush. But I was so upset by "The Day After Tomorrow," as apocalyptic a viewing experience as I've ever had, that I walked briskly from the theater, pushed my way through the double-wide fatso-watsos thronging the mall, and strode directly to a shop specializing in negative food value items where I ordered myself a double-bubble mayonnaised banana split.

Bruce Anderson is the publisher of the Anderson Valley Advertiser, America's best weekly newspaper.
 


Weekend Edition June 12 / 13, 2004

Peter Linebaugh
Remembering the Common Hood: Soweto and Runnymede

Team CounterPunch
CP's Favorite Albums

Jeffrey St. Clair
Troy, Now and Then

Gary Leupp
Not Really a Puppet Government in Iraq?

Brian Cloughley
US Military in Crisis

Antonio Ponvert, III
Iraqi Prisoner Abuse: the Connecticut Connection

Ben Tripp
The Polls Get Stupider

Joe Bageant
Mash Note to the "Girl with the Leash"

Ron Jacobs
The Return of the Hip Hop Insurgency

Forrest Hylton
Object Lessons from the Case of Francisco Cortés

Christopher Brauchli
Federal Bureau of Errors

Kurt Nimmo
Going After Qaddafi, Again

Wayne Madsen
Israel's Slap at Reagan

Anthony Loewenstein
Al Jazeera Awakens the Arab World

Michael Donnelly
A Lightship in the Forest: Greenpeace Docks in the Siskiyous

Greg Moses
Who Will Tell Us More About the Workers of Nasiriyah?

Susan Davis
Harry Potter & the Prisoner of Azkaban

Joseph Ramsey
Weather Report: a Review of The Weather Underground

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The 18th Brumaire in the 21st Century

Wayne Saunders
The Gipper, D-Day and the Stanley Cup

Poets' Basement
Richey, Ford, La Morticella, Albert

Website of the Weekend
Insurgent Music


 

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