Discussion:
Jon Stewart Flunks His Spartacus Test
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Ubiquitous
2010-04-30 02:44:18 UTC
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By Jeffrey Lord on 4.27.10 @ 6:08AM

"I am Spartacus."

It is one of the iconic lines from an iconic film.

Remember Spartacus? The 1960 Stanley Kubrick film based on a Howard Fast
novel about a slave rebellion back in the glory days of Rome? Kirk
Douglas -- father of Michael -- played the heroic slave leader
Spartacus, his good friend Antonius played by Tony Curtis. In the signal
moment from the film (said to be a slap at McCarthyism by the film's
blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo), re-captured slaves, back in
chains, are offered leniency. They will not face crucifixion if they
will but give up Spartacus, who sits in their midst unrecognizable to
the Romans. Waiting for the answer is Spartacus's foe, the Roman General
Crassus, played by Laurence Olivier. After a moment of silence, as
Spartacus is about to give himself up to be crucified, one by one the
slaves stand and announce "I am Spartacus!" -- signaling their
willingness to share their compatriot's fate. The scene epitomizes
courage, a willingness to take a stand when the all-too-easy thing to do
would be to simply say nothing and get off the hook.

One of the grim facts of war is that one never knows where and when
these moments will present themselves. The question always is: when
presented with this moment, what would you do?

Most probably, you will never know until the moment arrives.

The passengers of United Airlines Flight 93 were presented with just
such a moment on the opening day of this war. One minute they were
average Americans flying peacefully from Newark to San Francisco on a
beautiful late summer day. The next they found themselves shockingly
confronted with their Spartacus moment. Four hijackers had taken over
their plane during what the Americans quickly learned from family cell
phone calls was an all out attack on their country. The World Trade
Center towers were in flames, soon to collapse. The Pentagon had just
had a jet ram into it. The plane they were on -- United 93 -- was
clearly headed back East to Washington -- on target to destroy either
the White House or the U.S. Capitol.

The fact that the story is history now doesn't make it any easier to
recall. The passengers, doubtless scared witless, decided to rebel. They
would not be passive participants in the destruction of their country.
One by one they stood up and said, in effect, "I am Spartacus." Or, in
the words of passenger Todd Beamer, "Let's roll." A horrific struggle
raged, the plane went down in a farmer's field in Pennsylvania. Every
single passenger and hijacker died. The White House and the United
States Capitol, not to mention an unimagined number of lives on the
ground, were spared.

"I am Spartacus," these people were saying to the rest of us. "I am
Spartacus."

Comes now the tale of South Park, the irreverent, edgy and sometime
(sometime??) offensive cartoon created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone.
The show is a staple of Comedy Central, where it regularly spends its
air time, in the words of the New York Post, ridiculing "every sacred
convention in the book, from major religions and celebrities to gays and
the physically disabled." Which is to say, making full use of the First
Amendment right to free expression.

As all of America now knows, Parker and Stone decided to do their thing
with Islam and Mohammed, having their characters trying to decide how to
portray Mohammed without, well, actually showing him. Which, of course,
is forbidden in Islam. This being a comedy show, The Prophet finally
shows up in a bear costume.

And in the blink of an eye, a Spartacus moment began to evolve. Again
according to the Post, "a New York-based Web site, Revolution
Muslim…'warned' Parker and Stone they would end up like Theo Van Gogh --
the Dutch filmmaker killed in 2004 by an Islamic terrorist after he made
a film dealing with abuse of Muslim women."

Threatened now, Parker and Stone refused to back down. They prepared a
response, inserted as part of the storyline in their next South Park
episode. Kyle, the one Jewish kid in the mix (and modeled after
co-creator Stone), was to have delivered a 35-second speech at show's
end warning of "fear and intimidation." There was to be no mention of
Mohammed.

And Comedy Central -- Cowardly Central as the Post promptly dubbed the
network -- bleeped Kyle's little talk out completely. Parker and Stone
have a statement on their website, found here.

Which brings us to Jon Stewart.

He the Braveheart who has dared to battle -- yes! Can you believe
it!!!??? -- Fox News! Stewart is so daring, don't you know, so gutsy, so
edgy he actually uses -- OMG! -- the F-bomb on the air! Wow! What a guy!
How 1969! The New York Times, unsurprisingly quick to adore this kind of
faux courage, responded with an adoring profile, calling this David of
the Liberal Media "relentless" as he swings away at the Goliath Fox.
Ooooooooo…look! He took on…Bernard Goldberg! Sarah Palin! What a guy!
Dust off the next Profile in Courage Award, Caroline!

Then, out of the blue, Jon Stewart found himself in a situation that
demanded not the faux courage to take on Fox News. This time, not unlike
the passengers of United Flight 93, Stewart suddenly found himself
staring his own Spartacus moment in the face. The real thing.

His response?

"It's their right," he said of Comedy Central in a verbal shrug of
indifference. "We all serve at their pleasure." In a monologue
punctuated by yuks, he defended the network by saying, "The censorship
was a decision Comedy Central made, I think as a way to protect our
employees from what they believe was any harmful repercussions to
them….but again they sign the checks."

They sign the checks.

Now there's a Spartacus moment. "Hey, Spartacus babe, we luv ya, big
guy. What a ride that revolt thing, huh? Listen, Sparky, I can't hang up
on some cross somewhere. I'm doing the lion-in-the-arena thing next
Friday. They tell me the place is sold out. So, well, you're sweet.
Really. But General Crassus over there signs the checks, capiche? And,
hey, we gotta protect our guys, right? Ahhh, General Crassus? Spartacus
is the guy with the dimple-in-the-chin thing going. Front row center."

This Stewart response -- not to mention the response from the Comedy
Central suits themselves -- is an unintentional snapshot into the mind
of American liberalism. What to do about people who have committed mass
murder in places like New York, Washington, Pennsylvania, Madrid,
London, Bali, Baghdad, Mumbai, and Kabul -- and that only for starters
while they figure out how to get their hands on a nuclear bomb or
biological and chemical weapons?

Just look sternly into the camera, wring your hands, and say to these
misguided people what Jon Stewart said to Revolution Muslim: "Your type
of hatred and intolerance -- that's the enemy."

Take that Al Qaeda!

This is really quite remarkable, if in its own way quite predictable.
Jon Stewart is by all accounts a nice guy, a talented guy, a smart guy.
He has used The Daily Show to successfully carve out a niche as what his
occasional Fox sparring partner Bill O'Reilly calls "a cornerstone of
the liberal media in America." God bless America and Stewart's freedom.

Yet precisely because Stewart is viewed as the Lion of the Liberal
Media, his wimpy response to an actual threat from a group presenting
itself as just one more face of Islamic terror serves as a reminder of
exactly why so many millions of Americans have come to mistrust
President Obama or in fact any liberal when it comes to responding to
America's enemies. After all the touchy-feely Obama outreach to Iran --
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad just continues to build his nuclear bombs anyway.
Nancy Pelosi and John Kerry travel to Syria to make nice -- but long
range Scud missiles will go to Hezbollah anyway. And so on. Electing
Obama was presented as the change that would make precisely this kind of
threat to South Park go away. Oops.

There is nothing new here, really. Same thin soup, different bowl.
Neville Chamberlain hosts The Daily Show.

The problem is that instead of American national security or that of the
West, we are talking about a slightly different issue yet one still
vitally connected to the larger whole.

American and Western culture -- the good, the bad and the ugly of it
over a few thousand centuries, from Plato to Parker and Shakespeare to
Stone -- can thrive only in an atmosphere of intellectual freedom. That
freedom, as has been made abundantly clear since 9/11, is under full
scale assault.

Whether it's planes being rammed into buildings in the heart of the
world's financial center or the latest move in Somalia to ban music,
intellectual freedom is under attack. The attackers may be organized,
they may be unorganized. They may have billions at their disposal, they
may have a box cutter. But make no mistake, they are obsessed with the
same thing -- achieving victory over the West and all it represents
whatever the cost and however long it takes.

They do not care about the safety and security of Trey Parker and Matt
Stone or Jon Stewart or Comedy Central or Fox or MSNBC or the best
Jewish deli in Manhattan or the next cover girl for Sports Illustrated
or any other production of Western culture. The objective is to kill the
target of the moment -- and oh by the way, wipe out the rest of us too.
No tactic is too small, no weapon big enough.

Which is why the fact that someone as smart as Jon Stewart closes his
eyes hoping his sudden Spartacus moment will just somehow go away is
disturbing.

This isn't going away. This is real. It has appeared countless times in
human history, and it has reared its head once more. This time at Comedy
Central, as unlikely as it might seem. Where the response was exactly
the timelessly wrong answer.

The right answer is never to pretend that if you somehow were
transported back in time, say to a house in Amsterdam in August of 1944
and the German Grüne Polizei were pounding at your door, you could get
away with saying: "Hi. Fox News can %$#@@ themselves. You guys sign the
checks. Seig Heil. Ann Frank is upstairs, third door to the right, the
room behind the bookcase."

The right answer would be, the right answer is always: I am Ann Frank.

I am Spartacus.

I am Trey Parker. I am Matt Stone.

I am Jon Stewart. And I quit.
--
It's now time for healing, and for fixing the damage the Democrats did
to America.
Alan Ford
2010-04-30 05:38:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ubiquitous
"I am Spartacus."
It is one of the iconic lines from an iconic film.
Remember Spartacus?
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FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP
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FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP FAP
--
If you don't beat your meat
You can't have any pudding
How can you have any pudding
If you don't beat your meat?
Day Brown
2010-04-30 07:44:27 UTC
Permalink
Ubiquitous wrote:>
Post by Ubiquitous
The right answer is never to pretend that if you somehow were
transported back in time, say to a house in Amsterdam in August of 1944
and the German Grüne Polizei were pounding at your door, you could get
checks. Seig Heil. Ann Frank is upstairs, third door to the right, the
room behind the bookcase."
The Almighty Dollar in a capitalist system always has the last word.
Post by Ubiquitous
The right answer would be, the right answer is always: I am Ann Frank.
I am Spartacus.
I am Trey Parker. I am Matt Stone.
I am Jon Stewart. And I quit.
We are where we are, and can only move the ball forward a little at a time.
But we are learning to use the Internet, which does not need the support
of a major corporation or its money to get a message out. These
religious and economic power elites that have always intimidated are
loosing control. its messy.

http://daybrown.org shows a flier I am starting to distribute prior to
my trial on May 21. I've been told the court wont let me introduce
evidence on medical marijuana, but the the League of Women voters
supports my right to educate the voters, and thereby the jury pool.

Got a printer? make your own fliers, and quit preaching to the converted
here. Start affecting politics at the local level, and it will trickle
up to become revolution.
James Dale Guckert
2010-04-30 22:12:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ubiquitous
He has used The Daily Show to successfully carve out a niche as what his
occasional Fox sparring partner Bill O'Reilly calls "a cornerstone of
the liberal media in America."
Which says more about O'Reilly (and Fox News, who runs him on
prime-time) than it does about Stewart. The former tries to play the
Serious News Guy -- he wears the mask better than does his colleague
Beck -- but then his character takes on a Court Jester (when he's not
interviewing lingerie models), thereby revealing himself to be little
more than one more character in a basic cable comedy of manners: the
Pompous Scold. O'Reilly has more viewers, many of whom buy into the
notion (as does Mr. Lord, apparently) that his part in the play is
somehow more "real" than is Stewart's. But the latter persona gets more
intended laughs as the former continues to act like it's not all staged.
--
JDG
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