Moore film a Brit hit
Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 broke the British box office record for a documentary in its opening weekend by taking �1.3 million...
Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 broke the British box office record for a documentary in its opening weekend by taking �1.3 million...
Counterterrorism officials are looking into the possibility of postponing the November presidential election if there is a terrorist attack at...
George Tenet, whose seven-year run as head of the Central Intelligence Agency has come to a stormy end, leaves behind a crisis of confidence in American intelligence as the United States struggles with Muslim insurgents and the threat of catastrophic attacks.
The black market trade in pirated DVDs is expected to top 1 billion pounds by 2007 as organised crime moves...
A teenage couple, apparently having sex as they sped along a New Jersey road, are recovering from crash injuries and...
Went canoeing on the Grand River today. I’d have taken a picture, but I’ve learned my lesson about taking digital...
Yesterday, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) released results of what it called a "worldwide" study on movie piracy through downloading. This self-serving release is obviously crafted to paint a scary picture, and the methodology isn't well explained. (By world, for instance, the MPAA means eight countries.)
After hundreds of American soldiers have died and billions of U.S. dollars have been spent, a Senate panel is saying...
A popular browser for Windows is subject to a security hole for hackers, British researchers say, but this time it's not Internet Explorer.
"Fahrenheit 9/11" makes no claim to objectivity, fairness or balance. Moore is an advocate, even a propagandist, not a journalist. He picks and chooses facts and images to make his case. There are cheap shots in the film, to be sure. But for all the howls from the defenders of the Bush Administration, it's hard to find an outright falsehood.