Hi All,
I wanted to offer some brief impressions of the film I.O.U.S.A which premiered last night along with a live panel discussion with David Walker, Pete Peterson, Warren Buffet, William Niskanen, and Bill Novelli.
First off I live in Orange county, California. Yes. The epicenter of the housing bubble collapse. Home of world class conspicuous consumption; and verily a state that is nearly three sheets to the wind in terms of drunken fiscal policy. So I was more than a bit surprised that the auditorium was nearly filled with a spectrum of people that you don't generally associate with Irvine. Maybe a good thing...
The movie is nicely packaged for a doco though I'd call the comment, "This is the Inconvenient Truth for the debt crisis" a bit of a stretch. The science and physics based issues surrounding the global warming issue are much easier to delineate in a movie than the ensemble of human, political, monetary, and resource issues that are woven into the debt issue. So in an effort to simplify the picture, the issues are broken into four topic areas; national debt, (lack of) savings, trade deficit and leadership. Most of the movie focuses on the first two issues, leaving the last two at the margins. Clips of Ron Paul got some expected applause. Greenspan clips aroused a few cat calls. The clueless man-in-the-street commentary was tiresome. Notably, and purposely, the movie proposes no solutions to the problem other than to become more educated and to become involved in the political process.
For the iTulip crowd, this is a movie to pass if you have any desire to gain insight into the details or genesis of the debt problem. Instead, I'd liken this movie to those 'crashed car' movies shown to teens in the first days of drivers education. It's a, grab you by the collar and rub your nose in it, approach to bringing an issue onto the radar screen of a disinterested populace. Ultimately and more interesting in my mind is the sociological phenomena of movies like this and the degree to which they can (or cannot) serve as agents of social and political change. Clearly, the genre is hot right now (Inconvenient Truth, Sicko, IOUSA).
After the movie there was a panel discussion where a few very uninspired questions were answered. Again, more interesting was the fact that the stage gave these five folks an opportunity to pontificate a bit. My impressions...
1) David Walker - he's got an edge and an anger in his dialog that is appropriate to the problem he's been grappling with during his tenure at the GAO. If there is one person who is really capable of leading a coherent nationwide dialog I think he's the guy to do it. I think he would be a good candiate for an iTulip interview.
2) Warren Buffet - the accurately self professed pollyanna of the panel made statements that seemed outrageous. My only guess is that he agreed to take a panel seat as a spoonful of sugar that would make the medicine go down. He seemed unrealistically optimistic with statements like "the pie will always get bigger and we just need to get better at slicing it" and he tried repeatedly to appeal to the American sense of "were so great we can easily solve this problem" with several anecdotes - one of which was terribly off-target.
3) Pete Peterson - grandfatherly type that is bankrolling the foundation that is allowing David Walker to get out and stump.
4) William Niskanen - dour and intellectual, he was the first of non-partisan panel member to roll out the ideological carpet. The scripted (?) unanimity of the group was demolished by his statements.
5) Bill Novelli - (AARP president) actually said "we're part of the solution, not part of the problem" which elicited groans and laughs from the audience.
The main message that resonated from the panel was that we all need to make sure that we hold politicians accountable and we'll be able to get them to address this debt problem.
As a movie - save your bonars and wait until the film appears on Youtube or Netflix. Or better yet, read iTulip for a year or two...
Hoo
I wanted to offer some brief impressions of the film I.O.U.S.A which premiered last night along with a live panel discussion with David Walker, Pete Peterson, Warren Buffet, William Niskanen, and Bill Novelli.
First off I live in Orange county, California. Yes. The epicenter of the housing bubble collapse. Home of world class conspicuous consumption; and verily a state that is nearly three sheets to the wind in terms of drunken fiscal policy. So I was more than a bit surprised that the auditorium was nearly filled with a spectrum of people that you don't generally associate with Irvine. Maybe a good thing...
The movie is nicely packaged for a doco though I'd call the comment, "This is the Inconvenient Truth for the debt crisis" a bit of a stretch. The science and physics based issues surrounding the global warming issue are much easier to delineate in a movie than the ensemble of human, political, monetary, and resource issues that are woven into the debt issue. So in an effort to simplify the picture, the issues are broken into four topic areas; national debt, (lack of) savings, trade deficit and leadership. Most of the movie focuses on the first two issues, leaving the last two at the margins. Clips of Ron Paul got some expected applause. Greenspan clips aroused a few cat calls. The clueless man-in-the-street commentary was tiresome. Notably, and purposely, the movie proposes no solutions to the problem other than to become more educated and to become involved in the political process.
For the iTulip crowd, this is a movie to pass if you have any desire to gain insight into the details or genesis of the debt problem. Instead, I'd liken this movie to those 'crashed car' movies shown to teens in the first days of drivers education. It's a, grab you by the collar and rub your nose in it, approach to bringing an issue onto the radar screen of a disinterested populace. Ultimately and more interesting in my mind is the sociological phenomena of movies like this and the degree to which they can (or cannot) serve as agents of social and political change. Clearly, the genre is hot right now (Inconvenient Truth, Sicko, IOUSA).
After the movie there was a panel discussion where a few very uninspired questions were answered. Again, more interesting was the fact that the stage gave these five folks an opportunity to pontificate a bit. My impressions...
1) David Walker - he's got an edge and an anger in his dialog that is appropriate to the problem he's been grappling with during his tenure at the GAO. If there is one person who is really capable of leading a coherent nationwide dialog I think he's the guy to do it. I think he would be a good candiate for an iTulip interview.
2) Warren Buffet - the accurately self professed pollyanna of the panel made statements that seemed outrageous. My only guess is that he agreed to take a panel seat as a spoonful of sugar that would make the medicine go down. He seemed unrealistically optimistic with statements like "the pie will always get bigger and we just need to get better at slicing it" and he tried repeatedly to appeal to the American sense of "were so great we can easily solve this problem" with several anecdotes - one of which was terribly off-target.
3) Pete Peterson - grandfatherly type that is bankrolling the foundation that is allowing David Walker to get out and stump.
4) William Niskanen - dour and intellectual, he was the first of non-partisan panel member to roll out the ideological carpet. The scripted (?) unanimity of the group was demolished by his statements.
5) Bill Novelli - (AARP president) actually said "we're part of the solution, not part of the problem" which elicited groans and laughs from the audience.
The main message that resonated from the panel was that we all need to make sure that we hold politicians accountable and we'll be able to get them to address this debt problem.
As a movie - save your bonars and wait until the film appears on Youtube or Netflix. Or better yet, read iTulip for a year or two...
Hoo
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