House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), the party’s vote counter, began his talk by showing a clip from the movie, “The Town”, trying to forge a sense of unity among the independent-minded caucus.
One character asks his friend: “I need your help. I can’t tell you what it is. You can never ask me about it later.”
“Whose car are we gonna take,” the character says.
After showing the clip, Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.), one of the most outspoken critics of leadership among the 87 freshmen, stood up to speak, according to GOP aides. “I’m ready to drive the car,” West replied, surprising many Republicans by giving his full -throated support for the plan.*
This brief 18-second snippet on YouTube reveals the scene; it is probably one of the few in the movie with no violence or language warning necessary. Note Affleck’s character warns, “we’re gonna hurt some people” in the unspecified task:
The scene, of course, is about trust, loyalty and brotherhood, taken to absurd, or at least morally troubling lengths.
The selection was noticed Sen. Chuck Schumer, New York Democrat, earlier today.
Schumer, who has never stood with Joe Lieberman and Bill Bennett wanting less violent or explicit movies, who has never turned down a campaign donation from any Hollywood source ($329,000 total), and who ran one of the roughest, nastiest, and dirtiest campaigns in recent memory against Alphonse D’Amato in 1998, was shocked and appalled by the violence in the scene that follows the above dialogue.
The man has never complained about anything on prime time or at the multiplex. But if it’s shown to grown men and women at a House Republican caucus meeting, suddenly he turns into Tipper Gore.
The flexibility is amazing; Hoyer can say Republicans want to shoot Obama, Obama can say the GOP has put guns to the heads of the American people, but if Republicans watch a violent movie, they have somehow… enabled violence, or had violent thoughts, or something.
* If you had to go hurt some people, you would want Allen West doing more than just driving the car, no?
Typically, the moron Schumer failed to use this properly. He could have chided the GOP for encouraging emulating criminals. Instead, he focuses on violence (which was directed at those threating women), losing traction on the whole morality thing. Never bring a Dem to a gunfight.
The unreported story here is how many members involuntarily clawed out their own eyes with their fingernails as they realized they were watching a Ben Affleck movie?
The hypocrisy of the left is so overwhelming it's becoming difficult to take it all in. How many times do our friends on the left respond with "it's entertainment" when we complain about an inappropriate performance or comment? I recall Robin Williams and Whoopi Goldberg using insulting and off-color language to lampoon President George Bush during a John Kerry fundraiser. When asked about it, Kerry was very clear that he didn't necessarily agree with their comments, but supported their right to make them. There wasn't the least bit of concern on his part about disgusting, disrespectful comments that were directed at the President of the United States on his behalf.
Typically, the moron Schumer failed to use this properly. He could have chided the GOP for encouraging emulating criminals. Instead, he focuses on violence (which was directed at those threating women), losing traction on the whole morality thing. Never bring a Dem to a gunfight.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe unreported story here is how many members involuntarily clawed out their own eyes with their fingernails as they realized they were watching a Ben Affleck movie?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI guess Chucky beat Debbie Wasserman Schultz - aka Mrs Roboto - to the cameras.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe hypocrisy of the left is so overwhelming it's becoming difficult to take it all in. How many times do our friends on the left respond with "it's entertainment" when we complain about an inappropriate performance or comment? I recall Robin Williams and Whoopi Goldberg using insulting and off-color language to lampoon President George Bush during a John Kerry fundraiser. When asked about it, Kerry was very clear that he didn't necessarily agree with their comments, but supported their right to make them. There wasn't the least bit of concern on his part about disgusting, disrespectful comments that were directed at the President of the United States on his behalf.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abusecars can hurt too :)
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abusetime for a St. Crispin day speech ...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAnyone get Ben Affleck's opinion on this? Not as outspoken as Matt Damon, but still pretty left-wing I take it.
So the text for this is point-break.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI am sure that Allen West can drive fine with one hand on the wheel and the other on his Glock.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseJames Taranto has done great work with Chuck and his "dagger" rhetoric. "Daggers drawn" at "dagger's point" and so on.
Perhaps Chuck likes his violence Elizabethian.
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