"Tell me what you need. What you really
want," cried out anti-war protestors in NYC,
2008. Their answer: "Justice."
Nothing
selfish about that.
Providing the most
accurate portrayal of American dissenters
against the Iraq-war, "Finding Our Voices:
Stories of American Dissent" does ultimate
justice to this nation's foundational ideology
- civil protest.
This political
documentary, which premieres exclusively this
Wednesday night at 7 p.m. in Merrill's Roxy
Theater, is the most refreshing and patriotic
lens into American public opinion.
Passionate, creative, and empowered,
the protestors of this documentary are not the
hand-cuffed hooligans we've come to expect -
but grandmothers, Iraq veterans, women, men,
blacks, and whites who were never silent, but
strategically ignored for their political
opposition to the Iraq war.
It is
popular today to be anti-war; politicians have
run their candidacy on the claim that they were
one of the few, from the beginning who
disapproved of the war - Obama included.
"Finding our Voices" proves that it wasn't
always so popular to be anti-government.
Nor was it easy.
"It's a shame that a
government of the people, for the people, and
by the people, will not talk to the people or
listen to the people," spoke a member of
CODEPINK: Women for Peace at a Capitol Hill
protest.
The irony is unassailable,
said producer Holly Stadler. We are a country
built on the right and need to have civil
protestation, and yet any acts of political
dissent are discouraged and criminalized on a
daily basis.
Narrated by Martin Sheen,
the documentary secures the link between civil
protestation and democracy; "Dissent is a
cornerstone of the American dream, from the
Declaration of Independence to civil rights, to
the enfranchisement of women," the press
release said.
The film does an excellent
job of haranguing the mainstream media for its
complicity in supporting the Iraq War. "People
are tired of digesting the lies of mainstream
media," said a protestor at Capitol Hill,
directly into the camera. A poster behind him
read, "Fox News is Fear."
The film
editors were sure to include both their own
footage and that night's televised re-cap of
the same event - cleverly exposing the media's
continuous manipulation of footage for dramatic
appeal. Dissenters somehow became criminals:
loud, angry and uncontrollable on a major
network's Nightly News coverage. "Finding our
voices" shows the real story: women and men
chanting, singing, and holding signs in
peaceful protest.
The documentary reigns
in the opinions of eight distinctly different
political dissenters - including Iraq veterans,
mothers of deceased 9/11 firefighters,
political organizers, and US Congressmen Jim
Moran (D-VA).
Emotionally stirring and
informative, this documentary shows us exactly
what the mass media forgets to showcase:
Americans are not as apathetic and cynical of
their government as they are fed up. Calling
for peace, accountability, and humanity, they
ask for the right to protest, the coverage to
be heard, and the factual justification to send
American soldiers, men and women willing to
risk their lives, into fierce battle.
The film affirms; ask both what you can
do for your country and what your country can
do for you?
Link to original review

Printable Version