Missed Tributes
By Ben Stein
Published 3/6/2006, American
Spectator
Now for a few humble thoughts about the Oscars.
I did not see every second of it, but my wife did, and she joins me in noting
that there was not one word of tribute, not one breath, to our fighting men and
women in Iraq and Afghanistan or to their families or their widows or orphans.
There were pitifully dishonest calls for peace -- as if the people we are
fighting were interested in any peace for us but the peace of the grave. But
not one word for the hundreds of thousands who have served and are serving, not
one prayer or moment of silence for the dead and maimed.
Basically, the sad truth is that Hollywood does not think of itself as part of
America, and so, to Hollywood, the war to save freedom from Islamic terrorists
is happening to someone else. It does not concern them except insofar as it
offers occasion to mock or criticize George Bush. They live in dreamland and
cannot be gracious enough to thank the men and women who pay with their lives
for the stars' ability to live in dreamland. This is shameful.
The idea that it is brave to stand up for gays in Hollywood, to stand up
against Joe McCarthy in Hollywood (fifty years after his death), to say that
rich white people are bad, that oil companies are evil -- this is nonsense. All
of these are mainstream ideas in Hollywood, always have been, always will be.
For the people who made movies denouncing Big Oil, worshiping gays, mocking the
rich to think of themselves as brave -- this is pathetic, childish narcissism.
The brave guy in Hollywood will be the one who says that this is a fabulously
great country where we treat gays, blacks, and everyone else as equal. The
courageous writer in Hollywood will be the one who says the oil companies do
their best in a very hostile world to bring us energy cheaply and efficiently
and with a minimum of corruption. The producer who really has guts will be the
one who says that Wall Street, despite its flaws, has done the best job of
democratizing wealth ever in the history of mankind.
No doubt the men and women who came to the Oscars in gowns that cost more than
an Army Sergeant makes in a year, in limousines with champagne in the back
seat, think they are working class heroes to attack America -- which has made
it all possible for them. They are not. They would be heroes if they said that
Moslem extremists are the worst threat to human decency since Hitler and
Stalin. But someone might yell at them or even attack them with a knife if they
said that, so they never will.
Hollywood is above all about self: self-congratulation, self-promotion, and
above all, self-protection. This is human and basic, but let's not kid
ourselves. There is no greatness there in the Kodak theater. The greatness is
on patrol in Kirkuk. The greatness lies unable to sleep worrying about her man
in Mosul. The greatness sleeps at Arlington National Cemetery and lies waiting
for death in VA Hospitals. God help us that we have sunk so low as to confuse
foolish and petty boasting with the real courage that keeps this nation and the
many fools in it alive and flourishing on national TV.