Posted on 12/18/2014 8:23:05 AM PST by Kaslin
When did Sony get bought out by the French? Sony has decided cancel the theatrical release of their newest comedy after an apparent North Korean threat. The Interview, a Seth Rogen comedy about two inept journalists who are recruited to kill North Koreas leader, found itself at the center of an international cyber-attack on Sony Entertainment earlier this month. Mountains of data from Sonys secure records have been leaked by assumed North Korean sources, along with a rather chilling warning:
The world will be full of fear, the message reads. Remember the 11th of September 2001. We recommend you to keep yourself distant from [theaters playing The Interview]. If your house is nearby, youd better leave.
Responding to the terroristic threats, Sony aggressively waived a white flag. According to Variety:
We are deeply saddened at this brazen effort to suppress the distribution of a movie, and in the process do damage to our company, our employees, and the American public, Sony said in a statement. We stand by our filmmakers and their right to free expression…
First of all, I would like to make it clear that I dont read Variety. Someone sent me that quote. Second of all: No, Sony… You dont stand by your filmmakers and their right to free expression. Heck, the entertainment industry is routinely shy about venturing into uncomfortable confrontations over free speech. I cant help but notice that there arent too many Hollywood comedies making fun of Mohammed. (And when the radical Islamists get away with using threats of violence to censor their enemies, why should a little Stalinist-wannabe dictator in Asia be left out of all the fun?) I really hate to go here, but: If you dont watch Seth Rogen in The Interview this Christmas, the terrorists win.
After all, what good is the right to free speech if it is only exercised when it is convenient or safe to do so? Freedom of Speech doesnt really mean much when you are ordering a Grande Vanilla Latte…
One group of freedom-loving advocates are preparing to smuggle copies of the movie into North Korea. The least that Sony could do would be to make sure censorship is not incidentally achieved through threats of violence. Heck, make the film available for free on the internet. Put it on Hulu, Vudu, Netflix, Amazon, and even YouTube. Make it more accessible than it would be in a theater. Demonstrate to the ideologically repressive, self-aggrandizing, egomaniacs who run Asias pathetically incompetent Soviet era relic, that the world does not really care what meaningless demands they make.
After all… They arent the only ones with nukes. I mean, its not as if were dealing with Soviet Russia here. Were talking about a wannabe Soviet Russia which doesnt even have the necessary resources to produce decent vodka. Their major contribution to the Marxist/ Leninist experiment was proof that large groups of people can generally fake exuberance if properly motivated.
Of course, you almost have to wonder why North Korea feels emboldened enough to rattle their sabre in the first place… Well, in the era of Obama we are supposed to normalize relations with oppressive (and murderous) Caribbean dictators, relax sanctions on nuclear ambitious anti-Semites, and gift wrap northern Iraq for a band of terrorists who thought Al Qaeda was too warm and cuddly.
Wow… No wonder a little third world country, with the economic prowess of a rusted out VW bug, feels like they can push around a multi-national purveyor of free speech.
But let not your heart be troubled! President Obama is already considering taking action. Given Sonys surrender to state-sponsored terrorism, the White House is seriously considering unleashing the most feared politically-correct weapon in the Liberal world: The strongly worded letter.
Then again, they better be careful how they word it. Theres a chance they might upset a chubby North Korean dictator.
What would your suggestion be?
Pretty much what we have been doing. Leaving the Norks pretty much alone in hopes they’ll eventually become less of a problem.
We’re under no obligation to “solve” all the world’s insane dictator problems.
We could recruit American hackers and turn them loose on NK.
Nah... brought lack of gonads to light.
No; it doesn't.
too late
I have a different take on the Sony Hack.
The americentric press is missing the point. The message that was being delivered is not about some movie, the message delivered was to Toyota, Hitachi, Mitsui, Toshiba....... the other Japanese corporate giants.
Make your government leaders be kind to us or we will come get you just like we got the Japanese company Sony. Some unstated attack by the Japanese government on North Korea must be stopped or Japanese business will be destroyed
This isn’t 1950. The Norks have a lot of slaves, but their airforce would be utterly wiped out in one day. It’s hopelessly outclassed by South Korea alone.
They have nearly no ability to project power even within regions of their country. Their Command structure is so centralized that it would be paralyzed by electronic and kinetic methods. They would find it exceedingly difficult to even communicate within the country about our attacks. They are good for a long hard artillery barrage, then would quickly collapse.
They have no hope of a good insurgent war. No food, nearly no cars, and no normal business infrastructure where they could hide in the open. They could not pull off an Iraq campaign.
The absolutely only thing saving them is that China would need to acquiesce to the decision to knock them off.
The 1950 Korean war is a bad template. The south had no army for practical purposes, and our occupation army was simply little more than a constabulary. When the Marines and WWII Army formations arrived, it was over in a blitzkrieg to the Yalu.
The fighting for several years was almost solely the Chinese war. The MiG dogfights were Russians.
North Korea is not only not ten feet tall, they are about 5 feet tall. The South Korean economy is about 45 times the size of the Norks. If they ever attacked the south, the North would be obliterated.
Too late, the video is gone. That was quick.
Well since that approach has made them bold enough to try this. Might be time to take a different approach.
Were under no obligation to solve all the worlds insane dictator problems.
We are obligated to protect our self interest.
We could recruit American hackers and turn them loose on NK.
Now you are talking. Screw with thier infrastructure, move some funds around , screw with their currency, etc....
I can’t help but think President Reagan is turning over in his grave.
I'll have to think of a few new ones over the weekend.
Sony has lost its spine, but we won't.
North Koreans threaten hair salon...
A hair salon in London had this in the window and some angry Norks from the embassy came in and threatened him.
Death scene from the Interview:
http://nypost.com/2014/12/18/kim-jong-un-death-scene-from-the-interview-leaks-online/
You missed my second post with link to a blog. It is still there.
http://bestshowsontvkasuwell.blogspot.com/2014/12/kim-jong-un-death-scene-interview.html
Thanks, I did miss that.
What would have happened if Hitler demanded that the studios not release the Great Dictator? Would FDR have caved? Would Warner Brothers? That was a different America. If WW III comes I don’t think we will have the will to fight or win.
A Japanese company capitulates and everyone wants to talk about the end of the first amendment, geesh
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