hi, 

i dont have the original url for this,as it was
forwarded to me. but the story is popping up in many
search engines, so it's legit

It's interesting that he might want to work with Mel
Gibson. His dad is , ahem, quite the conspiracy
theorist.

another link
http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,925548,00.html

Richard
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Published 3/28/2003 4:00 PM
View printer-friendly version


LOS ANGELES, March 28 (UPI) -- Filmmaker Michael
Moore's next project 
might be more controversial than his Oscar-winning
documentary "Bowling 
for Columbine."

According to a report in Friday's Daily Variety, Moore
is working on a 
documentary about the "the murky relationship" between
former President 
George Bush and the family of al-Qaida leader Osama
bin Laden. The paper 
said the movie, "Fahrenheit 911," will suggest that
the bin Laden family 
profited greatly from the association.

Moore's anti-war, anti-Bush Oscar acceptance speech
provoked a mixture 
of cheers and boos at the Academy Awards last Sunday.

In addition to the Best Documentary Oscar, "Bowling
for Columbine" also 
had an extraordinarily robust bottom line. Made for
about $3 million, it 
has grossed nearly $40 million worldwide -- making it
one of the most 
commercially successful documentaries of all time.

Variety reported that Moore is working out a deal with
Mel Gibson's 
production company, Icon Productions, to finance
"Fahrenheit 911."

According to Moore, the former president had a
business relationship 
with Osama bin Laden's father, Mohammed bin Laden, a
Saudi construction 
magnate who left $300 million to Osama bin Laden. It
has been widely 
reported that bin Laden used the inheritance to
finance global 
terrorism.

Moore said the bin Laden family was heavily invested
in the Carlyle 
Group, a private global investment firm that the
filmmaker said 
frequently buys failing defense companies and then
sells them at a 
profit. Former President Bush has reportedly served as
a senior adviser 
with the firm.

"The senior Bush kept his ties with the bin Laden
family up until two 
months after Sept. 11," said Moore.

Moore told Variety the primary focus of the new
project will be to 
examine what has happened to the United States since
the Sept. 11 
terrorist attack. He accused the Bush administration
of using a tragic 
event to push its agenda.20

"It (the new project) certainly does deal with the
Bush and bin Laden 
ties," said Moore. "It asks a number of questions that
I don't have the 
answers to yet, but which I intend to find out."

Moore said he expects the new movie to be in U.S.
theaters in time for 
the 2004 presidential election.

While some critics accused Moore of being
anti-American for his Oscar 
speech, Moore told Variety business has been very good
for his movie and 
his best-selling book "Stupid White Men: And Other
Sorry Excuses for the 
State of the Nation."

"I expressed exactly what was in the film and instead
of being 
blacklisted, I've not only gotten a deal to fund
'Fahrenheit 911' but 
offers on the film after," he said. "Presales on
('Bowling for 
Columbine's') video release ran ahead of 'Chicago'
this week, and my 
book is returning to the top spot on the New York
Times best-seller 
list."

Moore said the success of his documentary and book
reflects majority 
public support for his political argument.

"It's because the majority of Americans agree with me,
see the economy 
in the toilet and didn't vote for George W," he said.
"People are now 
realizing you can question your government while still
caring about the 
soldiers."20


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