Saturday, January 15, 2011
Taxi to the Dark Side
With a title like Taxi to the Dark Side, you know it’s not going to be a light-and-fluffy film, but it’s a film that needed to be made, and should be seen by everyone.
The measure of a nation is how well it lives up to its ideals in the worst of times. 9/11 was that trial for America, and America failed. If you do not believe that former U.S. president George W. Bush, former vice president Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, White House Council John Yoo, and at least a half dozen other members of the Bush Administration are guilty of war crimes, you must see this documentary.
Even if you suspect they do, but have lingering doubts – you must see this documentary.
And especially if you don’t know either way, and know nothing about this issue – you must see this documentary.
This is not some sort of Michael Moore propaganda piece. This transcends partisan politics. It deals with a broader issue. It focuses on the treatment of just one detainee and will probably make you sick to your stomach – if you can stomach it at all. And then reminds you that this happened not to just one guy, but to 83,000 others too.
Hell yes, its difficult to watch - there is graphic photos of torture – but is that an excuse not to watch it? The fact is they are presented because showing them is necessary to fully understand the extent of what went on. And guess what? If you are an American, you damn well should sit through this, because you are guilty too – this is what your elected officials did.
Of course when word finally got out, and they got blowback for it, in an outrageous act of cowardice, they left their own subordinates out to dry.
The film makes the case, clearly, efficiently and thoroughly. Which makes it not only an excellent documentary, but an important one too.
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