Christopher Hitchens On Mel Gibson

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[Moozik: Keane - Nothing In My Way]

I don't agree with a lot of what Christopher Hitchens has to say. In fact the times that I've seen him on TV (Bill Maher's show in particular) he's actually annoyed me. But, I must say that I did get a chuckle out of him taking Mel Gibson to task.

I also think that the difference between the blood-alcohol levels—and indeed the speed limits—that occasioned the booking are insufficient to explain the expletives (as Gibson has since claimed in a typically self-pitying and verbose statement put out by his publicist). One does not abruptly decide, between the first and second vodka, or the ticks of the indicator of velocity, that the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion are valid after all.

There's a lot to dislike about Gibson. He is given to furious tirades against homosexuals of the sort that make one wonder if he has some kind of subliminal or "unaddressed" problem. His vulgar and nasty movies, which also feature this prejudice, are additionally replete with the cheapest caricatures of the English. Braveheart and The Patriot are two of the most laughable historical films ever made. (Englishmen don't form picket lines outside movie theaters when "stereotyped," but still.) He has told interviewers that his wife, the mother of his children, is going to hell because she subscribes to the wrong Christian sect (a view that he justifies as "a pronouncement from the chair"). And it has been obvious for some time to the most meager intelligence that he is sick to his empty core with Jew-hatred.

Mel Gibson's Meltdown

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This page contains a single entry by kev published on August 1, 2006 4:15 PM.

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