http://www.hardylaw.net/Bowlingtranscript.htmlDarth Wong wrote:Could someone please explain how, then? Everyone keeps repeating this claim, without backing it up.Master of Ossus wrote:Mike, first of all, the speech with Charlton Heston CLEARLY crossed the line between portraying facts and altering them.
This is, quite obviously, not my work. However, I am writing an editorial about the film, alongside one of my colleagues. We have checked the transcript against the film, and it is accurate. We have also checked the transcripts of Hestons' speeches, and they are accurately reported by this site.
I don't know. This is one of the statements that the Littleton Police sent us, when I requested information regarding their firearms codes, following a "60 Minutes" special detailing what happened during the shooting.I was not aware of this. If it's true, then it's more serious. So why is everyone harping on bullshit like the placement of a clip from a Heston speech?Having said that, look at the sequence when Moore is talking about the Colombine Shooters. He claims that they had not violated any laws when purchasing their firearms, when in fact they are believed to have broken more than 20 Colorado and Federal laws regarding the possession of firearms.
I think that this is substantially more than a nitpick. This is how Moore set up his entire argument.Nitpicks, since they aren't particularly important to the underlying argument.They didn't even ATTEND the bowling class that they were alleged to have attended WITHIN THE TITLE OF THE FILM. Moreover, Moore claimed that the Lockheed-Martin plant in Denver built ICBM's, when in fact it was converting ICBM's to be used in commercial satellite-launching endeavors.
\I saw that portion of the film. You are exaggerating.The scene in which Moore draws a connection between the KKK and the NRA by showing that the NRA was founded in the same year that the KKK was legally outlawed (it had been committing violent crimes long before then), was frankly ludicrous in its dishonest impressions (and the purpose of a documentary is to GIVE PEOPLE THE RIGHT IMPRESSION),
How am I exaggerating?
Does the film attempt to connect the KKK and the NRA by showing that the NRA was founded the same year that the KKK was outlawed? Yes. Is this a legitimate connection? Yes. It should also be noted that during this same cartoon sequence, the figure representing the NRA member assists the KKK-robed character in burning a cross.
When did he purchase a firearm in a Canadian Wal-mart?and the presentation of Moore purchasing a firearm in a Canadian Walmart in a staged or illegal scene was also dishonest in the extreme.
When he was showing Canada to be a good place to buy guns, since the people there did not have the violent mentalities that they have in America. This is the scene where he says something to the effect of "Look at how an American (Moore) could buy ammunition in a Canadian store."