http://www.nationofchange.org/last-war-crime-debuts-cannes-censored-us-1342021227
[…]
Written, produced and directed by a new talent known only as
‘The Pen,’ this film documents the torture protocol ordained by the Bush-Cheney
administration. Since it first circulated a trailer on the web; it has been
heavily censored and cyber attacked. You Tube has removed it at intermittent
intervals and MTV (which is owned by Viacom) has refused to sell air
time for a commercial.
Apparently, there are some things that Viacom won’t accept
money for—namely any film or story which exposes the regular torture ordered by
Vice-President Cheney. Curious about this documentary and the blatant
censorship–(I couldn’t download it)–I contacted the artist aka The Pen. Here is
the interview.
JM : What are you hoping this film will accomplish in terms
of genuine political change?
The Pen:” The Last War Crime Movie is about indicting Cheney
for torture. And isn’t that something billions of people want to see? They say
sometimes life can imitate art. But first we felt it was important that we
retrace our country’s steps as to how torture was used to get the false
intelligence to sell us on a war with Iraq. The real story of how this happened
has been buried under an avalanche of pseudo history. They want people to
forget the Downing Street minutes and the foreknowledge that the British had
that Cheney and Bush were determined to invade Iraq, even if they had to “fix
the facts around the policy” to do so. They want to obliterate the memory of
the flimsy legal arguments in the torture memos. So we dig out all the true
facts, and put them on the big screen, together with an entertaining narrative
story about what it would have been like if justice had already prevailed.
The people who committed these war crimes believe they can
escape accountability by changing the way people think, by selling the
American people on the idea that torture was a great thing that got us
wonderful intelligence to protect us. But the only people making these
arguments are the torturers themselves and their propaganda advocates. All
other percipient witnesses confirm the opposite, which we knew already,
that torture does not even work, and that any actionable intelligence they
got was obtained before they started torturing people. So part of the
mission of this movie is to counter their ongoing lies initiative, to
change the way people think back to the truth, and then we can have good
policy change, which is political change.
JM : Do you expect more interference, and if so–in what
form?
The Pen: Based on what we have run into already, the
attempted YouTube censorship (which we forced them to reverse after more than
7,000 direct protests), the rejection of the ad submitted to MTV (Viacom Inc.),
it is clear that we are encountering serious censorship interference from the
very beginning. Obviously we are telling a story that certain people don’t want
heard. The American people believe that we have free speech. It was on that
justification that the Supreme Court said in the Citizens United decision that
the gloves were off, and that corporations with unlimited war chests should be
permitted to flood our political process with money favoring their point of
view. But now we see that the other side of that bargain was a fraud, that
these same corporations believe they can discriminate against points of view
they disagree with. So for the actual people, we find that even if we have the
money, we cannot even BUY “free” speech.
This is not a tolerable situation. Must we generate
thousands of protests every time we want to run an ad when it is rejected
for political reasons?
Already Viacom has received over 12,000 protest messages in
response to our call to action there, and in that situation apparently they
think “we the people” can just be ignored. We are seriously considering a
federal lawsuit, the argument has to be made, that if they accept political advertising
of any kind, at least in that case, it must be some kind of 14th Amendment
equal protection violation to practice what we would call “speech
discrimination”. Only by bringing such a case can we determine if we actually
have free speech or not.
JM: Has there been any direct retaliation or threats
connected with the release of this film aimed at you? Any suspected
retaliation?
The Pen : Gandhi is reputed to have said, “First they ignore
you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win”. At this
point we are still mostly at the attempted “ignore you” stage.
JM: What has Hollywood’s reaction been to this film’s coming
debut? Are you encountering the same kind of cowardice that Michael Moore
experienced after his Oscar night comments about the war?
The Pen: We are just starting to get the word out about this
film. The censorship attempts are doomed to fail, but we still don’t have
enough visibility to where the rest of the Hollywood film community would be
called on to react. It would not surprise me if some of the censorship we’ve
been talking about was based in part on cowardice. Of course we all remember
when Michael Moore called out the fiction of the basis for the war in Iraq at
the Oscars. But in that case another reasonable possible explanation is that
those who booed him then would object to any attempt to politicize the Academy
Awards ceremony. The problem is that when you say you don’t want to hear about
this political issue here, and you don’t want to hear about it there, you may
end up with the dynamic we are confronting now with The Last War Crime movie,
that the corporations that dominate our media really don’t want these issues
talked about anywhere.
JM: Anything else you would want to add?
The Pen: “The soul of America is on trial right now. We have
thrown not just international law overboard, we have repudiated our own long
established law. We have always considered waterboarding to be torture. We have
always prosecuted waterboarding in the past as torture. So what’s the
difference now, that the war criminals have a big “R” after their names? We are
called by history, the real history, to stand up and speak out about this, to
bring America back to its highest calling. So if your readers are interested in
participating in the Viacom action they can go to , where you can
also see the ad that MTV rejected. And there is a Facebook page
where we are posting video clips, still shots from the movie, including
behind the scenes shots, and more on a daily basis, so you can follow our
progress and help get this movie out in real theaters where it belongs and
deserves to be.”
It should be noted that as of May 22nd, 2012, The Last War
Crime was presented at the Cannes Film Festival. There was no refusal to air
the film, no censorship–corporate or otherwise. Apparently the independent
artistic community in Cannes and similar venues knows something that evades the
vapid corporate offices of Hollywood.
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