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Not much new here to report but make sure to hang in until the end when Rep. Peter King reveals that members of the intelligence community and the CIA, who agreed to participate with the making of Kathryn Bigelow’s upcoming bin Laden film, were blindsided when they learned that that the release date was just a few weeks prior to the 2012 presidential election — an obvious betrayal of their trust and goodwill.
And why wouldn’t they feel betrayed? My guess is that most were eager to see this story told and to see their years of sacrifice and hard work given a positive bigscreen portrayal for a change. So there’s little doubt it must have felt like a slap across the face once they learned they had been conned into contributing to a “Barack Obama 2012” campaign commercial.
If you think about it, this is really a two-track story. On one track you have the issue of the White House possibly giving classified information to friendly filmmakers prepared to create that $75 million campaign commercial — something that obviously needs to be investigated. And on the other track you have Sony’s unforgivable decision to use the heroism and sacrifice of our military and intelligence personnel to boost a failed president’s re-election chances.
The word “disgraceful” really doesn’t do this situation justice.
Bottom line: Sony’s release date is a purely partisan move that puts a political stink over the film and does a disservice to our country and those who risk so much to keep her safe.
Shame on them all.
And how stupid? Did Sony really think they could get away with this? That it wouldn’t make them look terrible, blow any chance at creating audience goodwill around the project, and backfire horribly on Obama’s White House?
Arrogance does breed stupidity.