Democracy in America
Bill Maher - Les conservateurs américains et la France
Vidéo envoyée par Liberlogos
Tendentious? Obviously - it's Maher. Funny and frequently - embarrassingly - spot on? Too often, yes.
His criticism of the polar opposite notions of privacy struck me as particularly accurate; why does the American press get to conflate transparency and the rights conferred by the First Amendment with "if it bleeds (reeks of personal tragedy, past sleaze, or could ruin this person's capacity to lead a normal life), it leads?" I appreciate that Le Monde recognizes my complete and utter indifference regarding whether or not Cecilia and Nicolas are shacking up on a regular basis, and under whose roof. And I know I'm not the first to surmise that low voter turn-out in the United States (compared to the over 85% recorded in May in France) could indeed be a direct result of the non-political issues that get trotted out and beaten mercilessly by reporters and pundits on every broadcast news channel, print daily, and radio station.
There's grub to chew on here, even if it's shelled out in cynical spurts and capped off with a hilarious poke in the eye. So to speak.
Mmm, BHL?
Comments
Delphine
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19588942/
Until 2008....
"Let us not seek the Republican answer or the Democratic answer, but the right answer. Let us not seek to fix the blame for the past. Let us accept our own responsibility for the future."
John F. Kennedy
Rita-Marie, I am still wading through the Media and EU law doorstop that you gave me last semester - it's a fantastic source for this debate... the Libby mockery of justice has me stunned... sort of.
I saw this clip on the actual show a few weeks ago and was laughing so hard (out of humor and sadness) that I'm glad to see it on the net and translated in French.