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Conspiracy Nation Vol. 12 Num. 19

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Published in 
Conspiracy Nation
 · 4 years ago

  


Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 12 Num. 19
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("Quid coniuratio est?")


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BULWORTH
========
Movie Review by Conspiracy Nation
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Senator Bulworth (Warren Beatty) has some sort of nervous
collapse, then begins ignoring his handlers and says what he
really thinks. Interwoven through all this is an assassination
plot against Bulworth, financed by Bulworth himself who wants to
be murdered and have his daughter collect on a $10 million life
insurance policy. The $10 million life insurance policy, in
turn, is a little "gift" to Sen. Bulworth from the insurance
industry in return for his help impeding insurance reform
legislation.

The year is 1996 and Bulworth is up for re-election. He and his
people are scrounging for "campaign contributions" (bribes) from
corporate America. Senator Bulworth, in one scene, gives a
disorderly speech to assembled movie moguls whom he is pumping
for cash. But embarrassingly, the Senator informs the gathered
tycoons that their product is not very good. He even goes so far
as to note that most of them are Jewish and are lobbying for
legislation favorable to Israel.

Later, the unbalanced senator goes to a black, all-night rap bar
and lets his hair down. He smokes pot and parties all night.
>From this emerges a latent talent for rap music; henceforth the
senator speaks and responds to reporters with rap songs. Typical
mainstream movie reviews have complained that Bulworth gives a
white version of rap, but the mainstream reviewers miss the
point: Bulworth has assimilated black rap music, but the whole
point is that he is a white man doing rap -- if he did it too
well he'd not be Bulworth!

The soul-brother senator later participates in a debate against
his chief opponent in the primary. Questioning the two are a
trio of celebrity journalists. Responding to the first question
asked, Bulworth goes into a rap about how he's rich, his opponent
is rich, the trio of journalists are rich, and that they are all
of them bought and paid for by corporate America, which also owns
the media outlets televising the debate. "All of us get our
money from the same corporations. We all have the same boss."
Then, "mysteriously," there are "technical difficulties" and the
broadcast is halted.

The black girl who becomes Senator Bulworth's love interest turns
out to be his hired assassin. She and the senator discuss "where
have things gone wrong since the 1960s?" She acknowledges that
some believe assassinations of key populist leaders caused the
downfall of "the movement," but she herself traces the defeat of
popular movements originating in the 1960s to the decline of
America's manufacturing base. As Conspiracy Nation has noted
before, the factories are all moving away from the USA, and cheap
foreign labor is being imported into the USA to handle the
"service jobs" which cannot feasibly be exported. The senator's
black girlfriend believes that the failure of "the movement" is
due to loss of economic dynamism rooted in a well-employed
populace; with the people scrounging just to survive, there is a
concurrent diminuition of economic confidence which had in the
past translated to a surge in populist democratic movements.
With less and less money, the common people have a consequent
loss of esteem translating into political apathy. And her
opinion itself becomes transformed later into a senatorial rap
sequence outlining her ideas -- as if Senator Bulworth has become
a blank slate which merely echoes the voices of his constituents.

Ironically, Bulworth winds up as the target of an assassination
attempt -- but not at the hands of the original paid killers.
Lurking in the background when Bulworth is shot is the insurance
lobbyist, who feels the senator has betrayed the insurance
industry by his candid explanations of what it is all about.
After all, "They had a deal!!" In return for certain "gifts,"
the senator had agreed to bottleneck pending reform legislation
-- yet subsequently he had aired the insurance industry's dirty
laundry in videogenic rap music-type press conferences.

The movie closes with us not knowing whether the senator will
survive being shot. An intermittently appearing street bum sums
it up: We need you as a =spirit=, not as a ghost!

Although some might not agree with all the political views
expressed in Beatty's movie, such as his advocacy of socialism,
there is still a lot in this movie which "hits the nail on the
head." Beatty attacks the media monopoly relentlessly, pointing
out how a handful of corporations control what views America is
allowed to hear discussed. He even goes so far as to question,
"Who exactly owns the airwaves? Aren't they really owned by the
American people?" Conspiracy Nation feels that this movie would
never have existed without the power of Warren Beatty behind it.
Mr. Beatty obviously cares a great deal about where his country
is in 1998, and his movie, "Bulworth," boils down to a giant "I
care." Maybe he's wrong in some things, maybe the movie gets
"preachy" once or twice, but once again (as in Michael Moore's
"The Big One"), somehow a bit of the truth has gotten past the
corporate censors and into the consciousness of everyday America.

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +

For related stories, visit:
http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html
http://www.netcom.com/~feustel

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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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I encourage distribution of "Conspiracy Nation."
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New mailing list: leave message in the old hollow tree stump.
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Want to know more about Whitewater, Oklahoma City bombing, etc?
(1) telnet prairienet.org (2) logon as "visitor" (3) go citcom
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9




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