Posted on 12/18/2014 10:13:05 AM PST by Kaslin
By gum, he sounds like presidential material to me. Your move, Jeb.
.@SonyPictures dont cave, fight: release @TheInterview free online globally. Ask viewers for voluntary $5 contribution to fight #Ebola.
— Mitt Romney (@MittRomney) December 18, 2014
More than 13,000 retweets as I write this. Clearly there’s a demand for countermeasures among an American public that doesn’t like the idea of foreigners, especially savages like the Kim cabal, holding veto power over their culture. (Too bad China, Kim’s chief patron, already sort of does.) Am I right, though, in thinking that no major Republican pol aside from Romney has said anything about this yet? Newt Gingrich called the hack attack on Sony America’s first clear defeat in cyberwar but he’s not “major” anymore the way that Paul, Cruz, Walker, Rubio, and, yes, Romney and the rest of the ’16 gang are. Why so quiet? Obama’s not saying much either:
“Well, the cyber-attack is very serious. We’re investigating, we’re taking it seriously,” Obama said in the interview. “We’ll be vigilant, if we see something that we think is serious and credible, then we’ll alert the public. But for now, my recommendation would be that people go to the movies.”
No finger-pointing at North Korea, no vows of retaliation, although he may have strategic reasons for that. One unnamed U.S. official told NBC News yesterday that America “can’t let this go unanswered,” so retaliation — probably — is coming. In keeping with the cyberwar spirit of plausible deniability, Obama might be playing this low key so that when the power mysteriously goes down at North Korea’s military bases, he can kinda sorta pretend that he’s surprised by it. Although … in that case, why are the feds leaking to U.S. media that they think the NorKs are behind all this? It’s easier to preserve plausible deniability when you’re not making public accusations. As it is, it looks like our reprisal might be the cyberwar equivalent of Ukraine recently being invaded from the east by mysterious troops with no national flag on their uniforms. Everyone, including the enemy, will know who’s responsible, but some measure of deniability for political purposes is maintained.
As for Romney’s idea, I’m not sure why he seized on Ebola as the cause Sony should champion instead of, say, charity for the families of Japanese and South Koreans who’ve had relatives killed or captured by the North. Maybe Mitt figured that would only antagonize Kim further, which Sony would be reluctant to do. Also, he’s assuming that Sony wants to release “The Interview” but was thwarted by theater circuits that refused to show it. Is that really true? The hackers threatened the theater groups with terrorism but they’ve already done actual cyberterror damage to Sony; if the film was released, Sony almost certainly would have been their main target in the aftermath with more leaks from the trove of data that the hackers lifted. I think Sony was relieved when the theater circuits walked, as it gave them a reason to pull the film entirely and let this episode quietly fade after a few days of terrible press. That’s why they’ve already ruled out releasing the film in other formats. If they followed the Romney/National Review plan, they might end up getting cybernuked anyway. And A.J. Delgado may well be right: If Sony releases the film somehow, even for free, it could complicate their claim against insurers to recoup some of the cost of the film. A total loss might be the only way to get paid.
Exit question one: Would more politicians be speaking up if “The Interview” weren’t a dumb stoner-ish comedy but a serious film with greater artistic merit? I’m actually glad it’s the former and not the latter. Having a lame movie at the heart of this clarifies the principle that all speech, not just “high value” speech, should be safe from censorship by a foreign government. Exit question two: Where does this attitude come from? Explain it to me, because I don’t get it.
How #stupid- #Sony could have made a fictional movie but instead insults unstable country w/nuclear weapons.Sony= #idiots
— Greta Van Susteren (@greta) December 17, 2014
anyone who has been to NK knows how dangerous it is and would not have been so stupid to make that movie;
— Greta Van Susteren (@greta) December 17, 2014
Russia and China have nukes too and don’t take criticism well. Iran will soon be in the same boat. Are they off-limits now? Let’s make a list of who it’s safe and not safe to goof on. Al Qaeda must be at the top, right?
Or sell it to Netflix.
I guess I can’t play “Mecinaries” any more.
I have no use for Netflix
Sony poured $44,000,000 into this movie, and they’re supposed to just give it away for free?
Hollywood liberals only take “Principled, personal stands” against those they know they won’t shoot back, like Christians, White People, Republicans, etc.
That’s if any of this is for real. From the look of things it seems to me this is all about making Jews look bad, Scott Rudin and Amy Pascal who are both Jewish execs for Sony and their emails are released making them look racist, sexist. North Korea is made fun of all the time, the movie “Team America” made fun of Kim Jung Il, how come there were no threats over that? I don’t trust anything under this administration.
And like I said in another thread, I have no intention to watch it. It just doesn’t interest me
exactly. they invested in the film and should not be expected to take a loss because of some NK nutjobs. I think it would be much better if they MAKE MONEY off the film.
Schedule at EVERY movie house in the USA...and offer free admission.
It is not veto power. But if Sony can make an assassination movie because our culture eats it up then I suppose NK can hack into their information and make threats, which is hunky-dorey in their culture.
Sometimes we American’s act like spoiled brats. The idea of even making a move about assassinating a foreign leader is stupid. They could have done it by fictionalizing the names and places. But no.
How about a movie about murdering Romney? I mean, some things are just in poor taste.
Just because Kim is a monster doesn’t mean we should be monsters, too.
Seems to me the issue is not the hacking, but the threat.
Anyone that doesn’t like a movie for whatever can threaten violence at theaters to stop it’s showing.
It needs to be “stolen by “another hacker” and released into the TOR community very loudly. A watermark request for a donation at some point might help recoup some losses.
Romney - Has a brilliant idea. He ought buy the movie and release it himself.
I think Sony could be running a too clever by half marketing scheme here. Gin up interest in the film by withholding release. Then have a change of heart in the interest of the free market and free expression in a ploy to get the patriotic rubes to the box office.
It’s not “Wag The Dog”, it’s “Wag The Movie” !
I say that Sony agreed to not release the movie in exchange for the Norks not revealing the “Christmas Surprise” they have in their possession.
Killing tyrants, real and imaginary is fair game. If it was the Italian Prime Minister or another ally or country in good standing, I would agree. N Korea is fair game.
“I have no use for Netflix”
Why is that? You have an old computer or only dial-up connection?
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