A lot of people have savaged Michael Moore's movie, Fahrenheit 9/11, and I agree that Moore left himself open to a lot of criticism. But in the negative reviews I've read — and I've read a lot of them — I don't think I've seen any criticism or fault found with two of the film's most memorable elements. One is the footage of Bush in the classroom on 9/11, doing nothing constructive after hearing our nation was under attack. Defenses of his inaction seem pretty feeble…he didn't want to panic the children, he was confident Dick Cheney was in command, etc. Most of the time, Bush partisans just seem to change the subject.
The other thing that doesn't get addressed is what some think is the most important material in Moore's film, which is the story of Lila Lipscomb, a Michigan housewife who believed in one set of values when her son went off to fight in the Iraq war and another after he was killed over there. This article affords some insight into her sad story.