The
Powers-That-Be Are Really Frightened
by Charles A. Burris
Previously
by Charles A. Burris: The
Real History of Third Parties
Over the past
month Turner Classic Movies, my favorite cable/satellite channel,
has been showing a
series of films with political themes. But during this past
week something dramatically changed. Both TCM hosts Robert Osborne
and Ben Mankiewicz were joined by co-hosts PBS anchorman Jim Lehrer
and CNN anchorman Wolf Blitzer to repeatedly reassure viewers before
the November election that the dramatic stories they were watching
were indeed fiction, that "the system" works, that yes there are
a few "bad apples" but most politicians are good and decent persons
looking to do good for the nation. These movies included All
The Kings Men, All
The Presidents Men, and Seven
Days in May, films about incipient fascism in the USA. I
just about puked my guts out having to endure these mendacious mainstream
media gatekeepers simply to see the films once again. The Powers-that-be
must be really scared to insert such propaganda nonsense on a channel
simply showing classic films.
Also a long
time friend who knows my tastes for classic cinema sent me the YouTube
link for a 1933 film, Gabriel
Over the White House, and wondered if I has seen it before.
It's included on this
Amazon DVD Listmania! I created. I've watched it twice at TCM.
The first time over a year ago and the second time just a couple
of months ago. The first time I wasn't very impressed with the plot-line
or performances, just curious. But the second viewing I saw a lot
of things I had missed before. The
anointed dictator from God theme certainly is harrowing and
inspired that
ghoul from Hyde Park in his fascist ways. The forgotten men
marching on DC was straight out of the contemporary headlines concerning
the
Bonus Marchers, but too early for Smedley
Butler and the Wall Street plot to install their own candidate
for dictator. That cinematic treatment would come later with Keeper
of the Flame, with Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn,
which also aired this past week.
October
29, 2012
Charles
A. Burris [send him mail]
teaches history in the Murray N. Rothbard Room at Memorial High
School in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Copyright
© 2012 Charles A. Burris
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