Cardinal Inquirer, Stanford
(original
link)
Palo Alto Comedy Show Targets
Bush
By Elizabeth
White
January 30, 2004
Following the terrorist attacks of September
11, 2001, conspiracy theorists speculated that the United
States government may have been involved, directly or
indirectly, in causing the tragedies.
At least one Palo Altan Is still at it.
Local media activist Carol Brouillet has
helped organize a benefit performance "Behind Every
Terrorist There Is a Bush," that features comedy,
music, film and spoken-word poetry. The event is aimed
at audiences who already doubt the government's account
of the attacks and are seeking alternative sources of
information.
"A lot of people are very scared by
this issue," said Brouillet, a stay-at-home mother
of three. "We want everyone to have a good time and
to laugh and at the same time raise money for a serious
inquiry into 9/11."
The show, which opens- today at the Herbst
Theatre in San Francisco and Monday in Palo Alto at Spangenberg
Theatre, is a benefit for an effort called "Phase
One of the International Inquiry into 9/11," which
is to take place March 26-28 in San Francisco. All proceeds
beyond the cost of putting on the event will go to that
inquiry, Brouillet said.
Both shows will feature comedians Will Durst,
Bill Santiago and Rene Hicks, musician David Rovics and
spoken-word poet Drew Dellinger. Eric Hufschmid, author
of "Painful Questions," a book and companion
video about the physical destruction caused by 9/11, will
share the bill. The evening will also feature two films
produced by Take Back the Media, "The Protest that
Never Was" and "Bush Not a Nazi."
.
Brouillet herself will give a five-minute introduction
to the show looking at the Republican Party and what she
calls their "goal of making money at any social cost."
Brouillet became involved in activism after
seeing the film "JFK" in 1992. She went to the
Palo Alto library, started researching the CIA and former
President Bush's involvement with the organization (he
had been the director of the CIA earlier in his political
career), which she said shocked her.
"I felt a responsibility as an American
citizen to do something about it," she said.
Brouillet became a media activist, promoting
films about people like leftist author Noam Chomsky, and
--since 9/11 - alternative theories about the terrorist
attacks.
"The information is very sobering,"
she believes. "The fact that the government has been
lying -- there's obviously a cover-up going on and the
big questions are not being answered."
Brouillet said those questions include why
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was appointed
to head the 9/11 investigation commission (a position
he's since quit), and why "al-Qaeda was formed and
funded by the United States and Saudi Arabia to the tune
of $4 billion from the CIA and $4 billion from Saudi Arabia."
The show's name is derived from the Bush
legacy of supporting terrorism, Brouillet said. It all
started with Prescott Bush, the current president's grandfather,
she said, who was a Nazi sympathizer and financer. She
believes it has continued with clandestine political support
for Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.
Santiago, based in New York City and San
Francisco, said comedy about such weighty issues is the
"best way to package the truth."
"I don't always do political humor
but it's very appealing to me," he said. "That
sort of gut, visceral response to authority is why you
get into it."
Santiago said with President George W. Bush,
the "patron saint of the functionally dimwitted,"
the United States is going through a "cerebral recession
or a renaissance of stupidity," depending on the
spin.
"Basically, (the routine) is as cathartic
as actually lighting Bush on fire in effigy," he
said. "Instead of going that route, I tell jokes."
"I'm compelled by political convictions
that these issues need to be publicized," said Boston-based
musician David Rovics, who will play a few songs at the
show.
Rovics said he plans to sing at least two
politically motivated tunes, "Reichstag Fire"
and "Operation Iraqi Liberation." The latter,
he noted, was originally the name of the U.S. Operation
in the Middle East but was subsequently changed because
of its ironic acronym, OIL.
"The song is about all the double standards
associated with the invasion of Iraq," he said.
While Rovics said the show isn't a substitute for reading
books and news content on world politics, he did say it
can serve as a first step toward an education on the issue.
"I hope that (the audience) will get
a somewhat deeper understanding of the whole situation,"
he said. "A part of an event like this is to be the
media in a sort of way."
The show is a sequel of sorts to an event
Brouillet helped organize last April. She and others raised
enough money through their circulation of "deception
dollars" -- money look-a-likes that provide sources
of information on 9/11 -- to show the film "Aftermath
-- Unanswered Questions from 9/11" at both the Herbst
and Spangenberg Theatres.
Poet Dellinger is composing a new five-minute
piece for "Behind Every Terrorist There is a Bush."
He says poetry can raise awareness of the situation and
promote a renewed sense of engagement with politics.
"We're in a really treacherous time,"
he said. "Our democracy has always been imperfect;
it's imperiled right now."
The March conference/inquiry will feature
Mike Ruppert of From the Wilderness Publications, Daniel
Hopsicker of Mad Cow Morning News and Barrie Zwicker,
producer of "The Great Deception." That conference
is merely a warm-up for a more elaborate inquiry that
will take place worldwide in June, Brouillet said.
"Hopefully what we really want is to
create space for new witnesses to come forward,"
she said. "We hope that this inquiry will be so big
that we'll break this issue into the public mind. If we
could get it out there we could stop this government from
its criminal activities."
Call (415) 392-4400 or visit www.cityboxoffice.com
Tickets range from $12 to $22 and are available through
City Box Office. Tickets are $9 for students and seniors.
Contact Elizabeth White at ewhite at stanford.edu. |