Since his debut in 1979's Roger and Me, documentary filmmaker/agitator Michael Moore has aimed his blunderbuss of a lens against large American corporations and the institutions that he believes have flat-out screwed the working class. In his latest film, Capitalism, Moore ridicules the business philosophy that has blown up the economy, resulted in 6 million job losses and required more than a $1 trillion in bailout money to keep the banks afloat while millions of people have lost their homes to foreclosure. He's a man who has made perpetual outrage an art form in every sense of the word. He had some choice words for TIME's business editor, Bill Saporito.
What brought you back to a film about the economy?
I've been thinking about this for about the entire 20 years I've been making
movies. Most of the subject matter all comes back to the simple theme of an
economic system that is unfair and unjust, in which a few people with a lot
of money are making decisions that cause a lot misery and heartache for
millions of people.
So it wasn't a specific incident?
The Republicans and the Right Wing gave permission for all of us to use
words we haven't used before: capitalism and socialism. So let's have a
discourse. They called Obama a socialist because he told Joe the plumber he
wanted to spread the wealth around. Then we had the crash and a month later
Bush is talking about the glories of capitalism. I don't' remember in my
lifetime where the President starts off a speech says, "And now class,
today's topic is capitalism." They started using these words, so now it's on
the table. Let's talk about it.
Bank of America wants to give back the TARP money it borrowed. In one very
funny sequence in Capitalism, you back up an armored truck to various banks
and demand the return of our money. Maybe you were just a tad early?
And the AIG money? I don't think we're going to see any of that. You cannot
steal money, and then invest the money and then give it back. You can't,
let's say you are the president of the Kiwanis. You can't take the
organization's money, go make a profitable investment and then slip it back.
It's a felony. It's as if you beat up your spouse and then take your spouse
to the hospital and then say: 'How about that: I took her all the way down
to the hospital. That's the kind of guy I am.'
You've called the TARP program part of a financial coup d'etat. But if we
get our money back, with interest, and the banking system reverts to doing
what it should do, haven't the citizens won?
If you give me $700 billion per year, hey I have some good ideas. I can make
some money with that, for me and for you. I'm going to have my best quarter
if you gave me that money. I wonder how many people in the inner cities
would love a little bailout money to get out the hole they are in and have
one of their best years ever. This wasn't a gift; it was a theft. They stole
the people's money by gambling with it. They took the pension funds of
working people and gambled away their money, and went back to the same
working people and asked for $700 billion more of their money.
Capitalism documents, very powerfully, sheriffs departments evicting
families after their homes have been sold in foreclosure. Clearly, lots of
people got put into bad mortgages by sleazeball operators. But didn't
ordinary homeowners get greedy too?
That's a completely a diversionary tactic how greedy can you get that you'd
want a roof over you head? The FBI has said that 80% of mortgage fraud has
been instituted by banks, not the people, not the home buyer; that's an
FBI's statistic. The No. 1 cause of bankruptcies is medical bills. The mass
media has done a pretty good job of placing blame on lower income people.
For two hours this week I'm going to give the other side and here's the
other side: don't blame the victim.
Real wages have not increased in a decade. You would think that labor unions
would have been able to take advantage of the situation and recruit more
members? Why haven't they?
This is the crux of the problem: because the Republicans and the right wing
have been successful in almost eliminating unions, everyone else has
suffered as a result. Because unions fought for good pay and benefits, so
many other people who weren't union members benefited. By decimating the
working class the corporations may have increased profits short term. But
what they found is that [by forcing down wages] they couldn't sell their
products to their employees three years down the road. The wealthy have
never liked to pay for the labor that enriches them. Ever since slavery was
eliminated, they have been trying to keep it as close to slavery as they can
without violating the slave laws. When you have a United or a Continental
pilot having to walk dogs as a side job [to supplement their salaries], you
have admitted on the spot that capitalism doesn't work. What will historians
and anthropologists call it? They are not going to call us employees or
associates. They are going to call us wage slaves.
But aren't you really a model capitalist? You raise money. You hire people.
You create a product and sell it to the public, bearing the risk and gaining
the rewards that goes along with it.
Capitalism would have never let me be a filmmaker, living in Flint, Michigan
with a high school education. I was going to have to make that happen
myself. My last movie, I gave it away for free on the Internet: Slacker
Uprising. If I were a capitalist I would not give my employees health
insurance with no deductible, which I do, including dental, and paid
pregnancy leave. That's not called capitalism, that's called being a
Christian and someone who believes in democracy, so that everyone should get
a fair slice of the pie.
What do you want people to feel when they walk out of the theater?
I want what all filmmakers want: I want people to walk out and say to each
other: 'Wow, that was great way to spend two hours. That was exhilarating. I
haven't seen anything like that in a while.'