[cdn_abolition] [sos dfait] Digest Number 1004
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[2]canada day weekend [news] From: news_muse
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[5]canada day weekend [news]
Posted by: "news_muse" [6]no_reply at yahoogroups.ca [7]dfait_sos
Mon Jul 2, 2007 7:05 pm (EST)
Check your TV Guides!
Toronto Star Newsweek's TV Guide lists:
Andrew Luster movie replays on CITY-TV Thursday, July 5th, 2007
at 3:05 a.m.
and
Hurricane Carter's story replays on the History Channel at
12a.m. Friday,
July 6, 2007.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[canadian press]
Moore pumps blunt look at health care
Michael Moore, left, take a look at the sorry state of the U.S.
health-care system in Sicko.
Sicko
Stars: Michael Moore
Director: Michael Moore
**** (out of 5)
Michael is one of the most contentious filmmakers of his
generation,
and in the documentary milieu, undoubtedly the most successful.
Beloved by the left, loathed on the right, the Michigan-native's
viewpoints are blunt, typically one-sided, and not particularly
well-
balanced, but are delivered in effective emotional waves that
range
from the hilarious to the bitterly painful.
Sicko, Moore's commentary on the sorry state of the U.S. health
care
system in which upwards of 50 million Americans are left
uninsured,
is his latest attack on the deficiencies of the U.S. social and
political system.
Take note of that last part of the sentence, Moore haters-the
director swears this is not an anti-American film, but rather a
criticism of a system gone astray.
The Oscar-winner looks to Canada, the United Kingdom, France and
Cuba as shining examples of countries with universal health care
systems that, for the most part, work in caring for citizens
from
all walks of life and all economic circumstances.
Moore spends the early part of Sicko focusing on the health care
experience of Canadians in London, Ont. Moore is one quarter
Canadian and still has family in Western Ontario and the
relative
ease with which they obtain medical services.
The focus then shifts to Britain where the director questions
patients and a well-to-do doctor about their impressions of the
U.S.
system before heading to France to examine a seemingly idyllic
system that cares for citizens with kid gloves from birth to
death.
Then there's Cuba. To make his point, Moore takes workers who
helped
pull bodies from the wreckage of New York's World Trade Center
following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001-all of
whom
now have debilitating respiratory or related health problems-to
Guantanamo Bay and later Havana to prove that even in communist
Cuba, they can get the free and comprehensive health care they
were
denied by their government.
It's in Cuba where Moore's argument falters, overwhelmed by
hokum
and smothered by the emotional style that is his trademark. This
highlights the greatest shortcoming of the film-which for the
most
part is a remarkably well-produced documentary capitalizing on
Moore's ability to take audiences on a roller coaster ride
running
the emotional gamut. Moore's trademark, over-the-top
sentimentality
is unnecessary at times.
The arguments are there, and with a little balance would carry a
far
greater impact than they do simply because of the glaring lack
of
objectivity.
But that's not Moore's style, probably never will be. He
bombards us
with his view, presented his way, to make his point, and this
film
is no exception.
Sicko builds on Fahrenheit 9/11 and is largely successful,
shining
light through holes in the otherwise almighty foundation of U.S.
society, albeit in highly one-sided terms.
CHRIS ATCHISON/metro toronto
[8]http://www.metronews.ca/movies
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Dont call me anti-American
Filmmaker Moore opens up about his latest, Sicko
chris atchison/metro toronto
There is no greater pro-American act to do than what I do,
documentary filmmaker Michael Moore says. His newest film,
Sicko, opens in theatres today.
By the time his new film hits theatres today, conservative
commentators across Canada and the United States will be
decrying yet another attack on American society by director
Michael Moore.
This time Moore is going after the U.S. health-care system and
what he feels are its deficiencies namely the fact that almost
50 million Americans lack basic medical insurance and are too
poor to get it with the new documentary Sicko.
Liberals, on the other hand, will be cheering Moores bravery in
highlighting what they will see as the greed of a system
designed to generate profits above all else, which turns sick
people away at hospital doors simply due to their inability to
pay.
Such is the polarizing work of the director who has made it his
mission to expose the flaws in the social and political fabric
of American society with documentaries such as the Academy
Award-winning Bowling For Columbine and the wildly successful
Fahrenheit 9/11.
But dont call him anti-American. Thats where Moore draws the
line.
I dont think its anti-American to point out to my fellow
Americans the things that are wrong in America and the things
that need to be fixed, Moore says prior to a recent premiere
screening of Sicko in London, Ont., where part of the film was
shot.
(The United States) was founded by radicals and revolutionaries
who felt that the highest form of patriotism was to ask
questions and to criticize those in power, and to hold those in
power accountable for their actions. There is no greater
pro-American act to do than what I do.
Sicko puts the U.S. health-care system under the microscope with
comparisons to the universal systems of Canada, France, Great
Britain and Cuba.
Moore utilizes his typical blend of comedy, gut-wrenching
emotion and anger-inducing political rhetoric to make his point
that almost one-sixth of the population of the most prosperous
country on Earth suffers because they lack basic health
insurance, whereas people in other First World countries, and
even some in the Third World, enjoy government-funded universal
coverage.
When anthropologists dig our culture up a few hundred years from
now or maybe even 50 years from now, theyre going to look back
and say, How barbaric were these people that they wouldnt even
say that their own children had a right to health care, had a
right to see a doctor if they got sick? That is really cruel.
Perhaps a crueller reality for some advocates who agree with
Moores stance is that little change is likely to follow Sickos
release. As he points out in the film, Bill Clintons plan to
introduce some form of universality to the U.S. health system
was quickly quashed by legislators and lobbyists in the
mid-1990s.
And with that, Moore offers some advice to his Canadian brethren
hes one-quarter Canuck, after all about not following the lead
of our neighbours south of the border.
I hope for Canadians (Sicko) acts first of all as a reminder
that at your core you did come up with a good idea here, he
says.
Dont throw the baby out with the bath water as you try to fix
it. Dont think that the solution lies in the American system.
Fix your system with Canadian ideas. Solve the Canadian problem
with Canadian people and ideas. Dont create a society of haves
and have-nots like we have.
Sicko opens today.
chris atchison/Metro Toronto
[9]http://www.metronews.ca/movies
=========================================================
==========
[now weekly]
Movie Reviews
One sick flick
Indicting Americas healthcare system
By JOHN HARKNESS
SICKO written and directed by Michael Moore. A Weinstein
Company/Alliance Atlantis release. 113 minutes. Opens Friday
(June 29). Rating: NNNN
Anyone who suggests privatizing our health care system should be
shown Sicko, Michael Moore's terrifying catalogue of HMO horror
stories in the U.S. You've heard appalling statistics about
Americans who have no health insurance; Moore's film is about
people who do have health insurance.
Staying out of the way for much of the film, Moore lets
Americans tell how their HMOs have failed them. But failure is a
matter of perspective: if you're an HMO, not paying for people's
health care qualifies as "success."
Moore structures Sicko in three acts, all anecdotal. In the
first, he pays heart-rending visits to people who thought they
were insured only to discover that their HMO wouldn't cover the
bone marrow transplant that would save their lives. They can't
afford to pay for the procedure themselves.
In the second, Moore as "innocent abroad" visits Canada, France
and England, where he asks, "If America's the greatest country
on earth, why don't we have better health care?"
The third, both absurd and touching, is the one that has really
raised American hackles. Moore takes a group of 9/11 rescue
workers to Cuba to get the health care they can't get at home.
The most contentious point of the film for international
audiences is Moore's unquestioning admiration of the Canadian,
British and French universal health care systems.
He's awfully impressed that a young English doctor who practises
under socialized medicine lives in a million-dollar house.
Having just spent time in London, I can tell you that in
Bayswater, Notting Hill's less fashionable neighbour, $1 million
won't buy a fixer-upper, which costs about the same as something
really nice in Forest Hill.
Still, if you're not fabulously rich, where would you rather be
struck with a horrifying disease London, Ontario, or Kenosha,
Wisconsin?
Sicko has emotional power, no question, though from a Canadian
perspective (one probably shared by Europeans), my emotional
response is leavened with a certain sense of smug national
superiority. However much we mock our own health care system, at
least we don't live in the States.
[10]movies at nowtoronto.com
[11]http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies
[12]http://www.nowtoronto.com/issues/current/movie_reviews.php
----------------------------------------------------------
[eye weekly]
Infernal medicine
Michael Moore's Sicko takes an incisive and human reading of the
USA's healthcare rot and still finds room for some clever stunts
By Jason Anderson
SICKO
Directed by Michael Moore. (PG) 123 min. Opens June 29.
Can a single work of popular art change society for the better?
Every softie wants to believe so but the more accurate answer is
not really and not often.
The best case scenario to which every socially progressive
artist aspires is the impact of The Jungle, Upton Sinclair's
muckraking exposé of conditions in Chicago's stockyards in the
early 1900s. The novel's most notorious passages related in
stomach-churning detail what was going into your
great-grandparents' sausages. The resulting public uproar
crippled sales of American meat and led to the drafting of the
Food and Drug Act. While that was good news for conscientious
carnivores, Sinclair himself had higher goals than merely
keeping a few lucky rats out of meat grinders. He'd have
preferred it if his readership did something more constructive,
such as destroy capitalism. I aimed at the public's heart, he
later grumbled, and by accident I hit it in the stomach.
A Sinclair-style rabble-rouser with a genius for making himself
heard over the celebrity exhibitionists and bellowing blowhards
that dominate American culture, Michael Moore has repeatedly
aimed for the heart in his ongoing quest to create a nicer,
fairer, less destructive kind of America. As a result, his aims
have often been so ambitious, they've negated the opportunity
for smaller gains. Where he could've strengthened Bowling for
Columbine by arguing more plainly for tighter gun control in the
US, he wanted to ponder the intangible causes of Americans'
seeming lust for violence. In Fahrenheit 9/11, he somewhat
undermined a compelling attack on the Iraq war with a
fuzzier-headed condemnation of Yankee arrogance and imperialism.
Moore again heads straight for the heart in his latest piece of
populist, polemical filmmaking. (Calling 'em documentaries is
problematic, as Toronto filmmakers Rick Caine and Debbie Melnyk
convincingly argue in their much-ballyhooed Moore critique
Manufacturing Dissent, which begins its local theatrical run on
July 20.)
But the reason that Sicko could be the first of his efforts to
create dramatic change is that it hits so many other parts of
the body, including the fingers. Among the film's numerous
damning examples of the idiocy that defines the American
healthcare system, the story of Rick and his missing digits is
the most memorable. After accidentally reducing his total number
of fingers to eight, Rick is informed that it will cost him
$12,000 to reattach the ring finger and $60,000 to reattach the
middle one. Being a hopeless romantic, Moore notes in his
narration, Rick chose his ring finger.
It's to Sicko's great benefit as a piece of agit-prop and as a
viewing experience that Moore largely sticks to matters of
fingers, lungs and ears instead of getting distracted by
big-picture gestures and conjectures. Whereas early speculation
on Sicko suggested he was preparing a full-scale assault on the
money-hungry Health Maintenance Organizations, he makes his case
for healthcare reform principally on the basis of stories like
those of Rick. And though the film climaxes with one of his
greatest-ever stunts spurred on by Moore's discovery that ailing
9/11 relief workers get worse healthcare coverage than the
inmates of Guantanamo Bay the big guy spends relatively little
time on screen, preferring to keep his (and our) attention on
the countless citizens who have been denied medical coverage for
spurious reasons or who have faced decisions as absurd and as
obscene as that of Rick.
The American horror stories are often followed by
counter-examples, such as the Canadian man who got his fingers
reattached without needing to take out a second mortgage. Sicko
rarely strays too far from the central question of what members
of a wealthy society should expect when it comes to their
health, Moore repeatedly reminding his American viewers that
things are very different for people elsewhere in other wealthy
countries, and sometimes in less fortunate ones, too. Indeed,
the many Moore--loving Canucks who will flock to see Sicko this
weekend may be impaired by intense feelings of smug
self--satisfaction upon hearing how great we've got it. (Please
refrain from operating heavy machinery for several hours after
the screening.)
The only thing that might harsh their buzz is Sicko's
excessively rosy take on foreign healthcare systems. Whether
he's visiting the happy patients in an emergency room in London,
Ontario (remind me to get sick there more often), or questioning
the cashier who reimburses patients for their bus fare to the
hospital in London, England, Moore is visibly astounded by the
apparent perfection of other healthcare systems. That these
systems have their problems (did any of those patients tell him
about the Romanow Report?) is a fact deemed unworthy of mention.
Perhaps Moore feels that introducing any shade of grey would
dull American viewers' enthusiasm for reform, but it
nevertheless comes off like another instance of Moore being
selective about his facts.
On the whole, though, Sicko is persuasive, cogent and
entertaining. Moore deprives his usual enemies of ammunition by
skilfully presenting America's healthcare crisis not as a
political issue but as a human-rights one. It's all fine and
good to win hearts and minds but sometimes it's wiser to take
care of bodies first.
EMAIL [13]LETTERS at EYEWEEKLY.COM
[14]http://www.eyeweekly.com/film
----------------------------------------------------------
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MONDAY, JULY 2, 2007
Metro_Toronto
published june 29, 2007
Canadian Idol producer frustrated with anti-Toronto bias
SHIFTING OUT OF IDOL: Canadian Idol producer John Brunton broke
the fourth wall of studied ambivalence required of reality show
producers yesterday with a public statement reacting to the
elimination of half the shows singers from Toronto on Wednesday
nights show. The first major cut of singers from the Top 22 saw
three Toronto natives Christine Hanlon, Derek Hoffman and Justyn
Wesley sent home by Idol voters, which seems to have been a last
straw for Brunton.
Im not really supposed to do this, Brunton said in a statement
released by CTV. Im supposed to be impartial. But as a born and
bred Torontonian, Im fed up with the lack of attention and
respect paid to the bright, young singers from Toronto. They
deserve more. It should not be a disadvantage to be a Canadian
Idol competitor from Toronto.
Obviously, Brunton is blaming the viewers or more to the point,
the aggressive regionalism that sees voters supporting local
favourites, or at least supporting them in greater numbers than
Toronto voters, it would seem.
While the rest of the country is buzzing about Canadian Idol and
the success of their hometown heroes, Brunton writes, Toronto is
not paying attention. Toronto is not supporting the local talent
found right in its own backyard.
Each year, more people come out to audition in Toronto than in
any other city. Each year, Canadian Idol judges select more
people from Toronto to be in the Top 22 than any other city. But
no competitor from Toronto has made it to the Top 10 since
Season One, four years ago, and thats pathetic.
While Brunton, as the shows producer, might be privy to the
numbers that indicate a telling indifference from Toronto when
the phone lines open to vote on Idol, at this point it might be
political to suggest the first four singers sent home deserved
to go, at least according to the voters, whose regional
loyalties might be a bit more diffuse at the top of the
competition, with so many singers to choose to support.
Of course, the cynic and the Torontonian in me wonders if the
lack of a Toronto singer to support might be regarded as a
calamity for the simple reason that, with Toronto unrepresented
as the show heads toward the finals, viewers in the countrys
largest and most affluent urban agglomeration might be less
likely to tune in and adversely affect the breakdown of
marketing statistics.
Of course, thats both cynical and, yes, perhaps a little
arrogant, but if youre going to run a show based around viewer
voting, you probably have to resign yourself to the frequently
disappointing results you get when you let someone else do the
steering. Either that or go all banana republic and start with
the bribery and coercion.
[15]rick.mcginnis at metronews.ca
[16]http://www.metronews.ca/column.aspx?id=58112
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[metronews.ca]
prison sentence halved for sizemore
actor tom sizemore's 16-month prison sentence has been cut in
half
thanks to the 213 days he has already spent behind bars and in
court-imposed rehab, imdb.com reports.
the black hawk down star was sentenced to serve jail time for
violating his probation in a 2004 crystal methamphetamine
possession case. he will serve his sentence near san diego,
calif.
metro toronto news services
=========================================================
===========
[canada]
Published June 28, 2007
Federal prison findings called disturbing
Report blasts inmate deaths
Some federal prison deaths could have been prevented if not for
a disturbing lack of assessment, competence and timely response
by the Correctional Service of Canada, a stinging new report has
found.
The findings are disturbing and indicate that the Correctional
Service has not rigorously fulfilled its mandate to keep all
inmates safe and act on recommendations related to inmate
deaths, said correctional investigator Howard Sapers.
This report confirms ... that similar observations and
recommendations are made year after year by the correctional
services national investigations, provincial coroners, and
medical examiners, he said. Although the correctional service
says it takes corrective action to ensure similar situations do
not occur again, the same problems are repeatedly occurring,
resulting in the tragic loss of human lives.
Sapers said the service has to adopt a timely and systematic
followup on corrective actions after the report found officials
failed to incorporate lessons learned and implement corrective
action over time and across regions.
Canadian Press
Deaths in penitentiaries
The study, commissioned by the federal correctional
investigator, examined 82 reported suicides, homicides, and
accidental deaths in penitentiaries due to factors other than
natural causes between 2001 and 2005.
[17]http://www.metronews.ca
----------------------------------------------------------
MONDAY, JULY 2, 2007
Metro_Toronto
Published June 28, 2007
U.S. prisons add 42,000 inmates
Prisons and jails in the United States added more than 42,000
inmates last year, the largest increase since 2000.
The total number of people incarcerated by federal or state
authorities in the year ending June 30, 2006, was roughly 1.6
million, the government said yesterday. That translated to a 2.8
per cent increase from the previous year, due to people being
put in prison at a faster rate than those being released.
Overall, the total number of people behind bars was more than
2.2 million, according to the U.S. Justice Departments Bureau of
Justice Statistics.
associated press
[18]http://www.metronews.ca
----------------------------------------------------------
[canadian press]
Sizemore's prison sentence for drugs halved
Tom Sizemore arrives at a film premiere in Los Angeles,
California in this November 5, 2006 file photo. Sizemore was
sentenced on Monday to 16 months in prison for violation his
probation in a drug possession case. [photo] REUTERS/Fred
Prouser/Files
Reuters
Published: Wednesday, June 27, 2007
* * * * LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actor Tom Sizemore on Tuesday
had his 16-month prison sentence on drug violations reduced by
half because of time already spent in jail and two live-in
rehabilitation programs.
Sizemore, 45, who appeared in "Saving Private Ryan" and "Black
Hawk Down," will serve about nine months for violating his
probation for methamphetamine possession. But with good time
credits he will likely end up spending about 4 1/2 months behind
bars, prosecutor Sean Carney said after a court hearing.
Sizemore was sentenced to 16 months in prison on Monday after he
admitted that his May arrest outside a California hotel was a
violation of his probation on a 2004 methamphetamine charge.
Sizemore has been in and out of California courts for years on
drugs charges. In 2005 he admitted using a prosthetic penis to
fake a urine test.
[19]http://www.canada.com/news
=========================================================
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23. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap/post;_ylc=X3oDMTJxZTlkODI2BF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BG1zZ0lkAzMxMjIEc2VjA2Rtc2cEc2xrA3JwbHkEc3RpbWUDMTE4MzQ2NjA0OA--?act=reply&messageNum=3122
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25. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap/members;_ylc=X3oDMTJmbjVqaTJiBF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BHNlYwN2dGwEc2xrA3ZtYnJzBHN0aW1lAzExODM0NjYwNDg-
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29. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/start;_ylc=X3oDMTJvc3NxMTg3BF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBF9wAzMEZ3JwSWQDNjQ3NzA2MwRncnBzcElkAzE3NjA3NjEwNzkEc2VjA25jbW9kBHNsawNncm91cHMyBHN0aW1lAzExODM0NjYwNDg-
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32. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap/messages;_ylc=X3oDMTJlaTNpcmZvBF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BHNlYwNmdHIEc2xrA21zZ3MEc3RpbWUDMTE4MzQ2NjA0OA--
33. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap/links;_ylc=X3oDMTJmN2RtMzFwBF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BHNlYwNmdHIEc2xrA2xpbmtzBHN0aW1lAzExODM0NjYwNDg-
34. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap
35. http://www3.sympatico.ca/aiwarren
36. http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/can-am/menu-en.asp?mid=9&cat=144
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38. http://www.voyage.gc.ca/main/pubs/imprisoned_abroad-en.asp
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40. http://decisions.fct-cf.gc.ca/fct/2004/2004fc1054.shtml
41. http://news.findlaw.com/legalnews/us/im
42. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/
43. http://www.aetv.com/dog_the_bounty_hunter/index.jsp
44. http://www.ymcatoronto/international
45. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/;_ylc=X3oDMTJkbWljbWdwBF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BHNlYwNmdHIEc2xrA2dmcARzdGltZQMxMTgzNDY2MDQ4
46. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/aicap-aifap/join;_ylc=X3oDMTJmbDRwZ3V0BF9TAzk3NDkwNDQxBGdycElkAzY0NzcwNjMEZ3Jwc3BJZAMxNzYwNzYxMDc5BHNlYwNmdHIEc2xrA3N0bmdzBHN0aW1lAzExODM0NjYwNDg-
47. mailto:aicap-aifap-normal at yahoogroups.ca?subject=Email%20Delivery:%20Indiviual%20Email
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50. http://ca.yahoo.com/docs/info/tos.html
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